From what I have heard you cannot bleed the clutch in a Saturn because it is all one peice. this was form a Saturn mechanic. hope it helps.
the best way to "bleed" any clutch is to get a can with a pump and a hose that will fit over the bleed screw. Loosen the bleed screw put the hose over it and pump fluid back up to the master cylinder this will force any air out.
you bleed it just like you would blled your brakes 2 people one pumps then hold clutch the other opens bleed screw on slave cylinder till you get stream of fluid no air about 2 times then refill master cylinder but there is no bleeder screw on clutch
Pump the pedal to the floor and then screw on the cylinder.
Fill resevoir Open bleeder screw to let fluid run out depress clutch pedal to floor Close bleeder screw
there are two places to blead your clutch and its a two person job the first thing you do is fill the clutch master cly. theres a bleeder screw on it then refill the cly. and bleed it at the slave cly. this is all done the same way you bleed your brake system
Right above the slave cylinder there is a bleeder screw. Just unsrew it and have someone hold in the clutch to start the bleed.
A person can bleed the clutch on a Ford Transit Van by hooking a bleeder hose to the slave cylinder, placing it into a small jar of hydraulic fluid, and loosing the bleeder screw. The clutch is then slow pressed until no air bubbles are present.
fill the clutch resivoir pump the clutch pedal open the bleeder screw and tighten it back up and repeat until the air is out and just fluid comes out
Loosen the bleed screw next to the entry point on the transmission, open the clutch master cylinder (drivers' side rear corner of the engine bay), and let it bleed. It's helpful to use a hose over the bleed screw that goes into a bottle so you can watch for bubbles. Keep an eye on the fluid level as it should drop fast. Don't pump the clutch or hold it down. The bleeding is supposed to just happen with gravity. Good luck
You must bleed the clutch dampener before bleeding the slave cylinder its that weird curvey steel hose before the slave unter the passangers feet. look arount the side of the dampner for the bleed screw
There wont be one on the master but there is one on the slave, it looks like a grease fitting.
I'm having a hard time finding the bleeder screw for my clutch on a 96 Chevy Cavalier 2.2? Can you help?