it should come right back up oull it with you hand and should be running because of the booster if not open the line again and it will suck air in it , but just do it to see if it frees it up . then re-bleed them all always do the one that is far away first , which wil be the pass side back then driverside back then pass side front and then of course the driverside front , always make sure the resivoir is full ,
Either 7/16ths or 10mm
you go to a mechanic, because this is probably the best advice you will get on the web.
A 5/16 brake wrench
Yes, I recommend you bleed all brakes starting at the RR then LR, then RF, and end at the LF. It may not be absolutely necessary but then again it may be. To be safe just bleed them all.
3/8 Allen wrench
from the furthest caliper from the master cylinder. Start with that one and move closer.
bleed your brakes there might be air in the lines or the brake booster is bad try to bleed all 4 brake 1st
It takes two people. # Suck the brake fluid out of the reservoir and replace with new fluid. # There is a bleed screw on each wheel, it looks like a grease zirk. Loosen the bleed screw and have someone push the break peddle and hold it. # Tighten the screw then they can release the breaks. # Repeat step 2-3 until the brake fluid is clean # Repeat on each wheel, refilling the break reservoir after each wheel. Do not get air in the lines either by sucking the reservoir dry or by releasing the breaks when the bleed screw is loose.
To bleed the ABS brakes on a 1998 Dodge Dakota 4 x 4, two people are needed. One person needs to pump the brakes while the other opens the bleeder and then closes it making sure all air is out of the system.
Bleed the brakes, adding fluid until clean fluid comes out from all four tires.
Always best to bleed both sides if you change a brake line. EG: Both front or both rear.
It was an option. mine does. just drive your van up to 30 mph and slam on the brakes and see if they lock up. if they do not lock up and you feel a vibration in the brake peddle you have abs.