It's that little hex head screw on top of the thermostat housing
If there is a coolant leak that is caused by the bleeding screw, the screw is probably stripped and needs to be replaced. The screw can also be wrapped with plumber's tape and screwed back in until the leak can be fixed.
It doesn't have one.
Theres a screw on the Throttle body at the end of the intake manifold. turn it with a screw driver left or right.
there is no bleeding screw on a car that old but if you want to remove the fluid there is a petcock on the bottom of the radiator to drain it and there is a drain on both sides of the engine block.
It bleeds automatically. There is no bleed valve or screw and no bleeding is necessary.
Same idea as bleeding the break fluid only much easier. You need to find the location of the bleeding screw first. You need a clear hose that would fit the bleeding screw and a container to keep some of the fluid that will drain out during the process. You must have the engine running and in normal operating temp. Let the coolant drain until there are no bubbles coming out from the hose. Retighten the bleeding screw and add more coolant on the reservoir at the full level and you're done.
there are a few ways to do this first look for a bleeder screw if one is found, run your engine open the screw until the air is forced out and u see a steady flow of coolant coming out ('''BE CAREFULL THE COOLANT WILL BE HOT''') If no bleeding screw is found try running the engine with the radiator cap off '''once again be CAREFULL with the HOT coolant'''.
you need to find the bleeding screw that is located on or by the thermostat housing.you'l know that is a bleeding screw/valve because the bolt is not holding anything down. you'll turn it with the car off. you will see a pin size hole on it. turn on your car and when coolant start to flow out of it you have succesfully taken out the air from the cooling system. answer the coolant system bleeder is generally on water pump the bleeder looks same as a brake bleeder and works in exactly same way
There is a bleed screw on the thermostat housing. Remove the screw with the engine loose. Ounc you have pure coolant and no air you can close off the bleed screw.
This depends on which generation Eclipse you have. If you have 1995-1999 (Gen 2), it is located directly behind the glove box. You'll notice a 4 pin plug going into the blower unit. It is attached with one screw. Remove that and replace with a new one.
There is a bleed screw on the thermostat housing. Remove the screw with the engine loose. Ounc you have pure coolant and no air you can close off the bleed screw.
Find the thermostat housing. There should be an air bleeding screw located on the top side of the housing. As you add water to the radiator open the screw until water runs without the sign of air bubbles.