Yes
Not bled properly or not adjusted properly.
The calipers or wheel cylinders are bad.
Replace wheel cylinders
there are bleeders on the wheel cylinders
if your car has rear drum type brakes you pull off the rear drums the cylinder is at the top between the brake shoes it will also have a brake line to it on the outside of the backing plate if you have 4 wheel disc brakes you have no wheel cylinders you have 4 calipers
Rear wheel yes, four wheel was an option.
There will be a wire running to a sensor at the front wheel bearings on both sides. No wire to the bearing, no front abs.
The wheel cylinders will be associated with the rear drum brakes. Drum brakes use a wheel cylinder to activate the brakes - push the shoes out against the drum. Disc brakes use a caliper unit to push a piston out and squish the brake pads against the rotor. The front disc brake pads are pressed against the rotor by pistons inside the calipers to slow the vehicle. Both are hydraulically controlled.
Less. If the pedal is going down, it is the master cylinder or one of the wheel cylinders leaking.
The same way you bleed brakes on a newer car, bleeder valves are in back of the wheel cylinders on the backing plate.
8
no the 96 steering wheel is different