Bleeding the brakes on a bike is just as difficult as bleeding a hydraulic clutch on a car; you have to force air DOWN against a fluid. The main reason it is easier to bleed the brakes on a car (vs the clutch or brakes on a bike) is the volume of fluid (or lack therof) displaced by the master cylinder.
The best solution is a vacuum bleeder. It can draw fluid down and out of the system faster than the air bubbles can travel up the hoses.
Lacking that, you either need a very fast manual bleeding technique, or as others have used on this forum, remove the calipers from thier mounts and raise them as high as practical to reduce the gravity you are fighting with.
If it were possible to raise the calipers above the level of the master, bleeding would be almost automatic.
Just trying to help you understand the reason you are having trouble so that you can devise a solution that suits your particular circumstance.
The best solution is a vacuum bleeder. It can draw fluid down and out of the system faster than the air bubbles can travel up the hoses.
Lacking that, you either need a very fast manual bleeding technique, or as others have used on this forum, remove the calipers from thier mounts and raise them as high as practical to reduce the gravity you are fighting with.
If it were possible to raise the calipers above the level of the master, bleeding would be almost automatic.
Just trying to help you understand the reason you are having trouble so that you can devise a solution that suits your particular circumstance.
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