You don't need to bleed brakes after rotor/pad change. Only if you are changing master cylinder or if you have air in the system.
Does it really matter what order you bleed brakes (furthest from the master cylinder)?
Will pushing in the E-brake cause problems when bleeding all 4 brakes?
Nope but it will make it a butch to remove the rotor
Your master cylinder is fucked mate.
>microscopic air bubbles
>Your master cylinder is fucked mate
>I hate bleeding brakes.
You are not doing it right. Get a clear tube and put it on the nipple and the other end into a jar of brake fluid.
if theres air in the system yeah, you have to do it by the specific order. if you just want to change old fluid, do it any order
this, or after you change a caliper/wheel cylinder
its such a myth you have to crack the bleeders doing pad changes, i remember on college they said if you dont you will fuck up the ABS almost always. ive done maybe 500 brake jobs at work, never cracked a bleeder, not 1 problem
if anything fucking bleeders snap right off here in Canada so you dont bother touching that shit lol
Yes, it matters.
Diagonal for some countries, front/back for others.
bleeding is a pain so why not do it the right way the first time?