Running around town with air in your brakes can make YOU into the speed bleeder !!!

Doing it
on purpose for years and years due to a simple "no maintenance" mindset, that sets an especially bad example for our new members to follow .....
and how do you adjust them valves again, Bill?Bleeding your brakes for a brand new person totally unused to bike mechanical work takes on the order of a half hour of time, with 1 helper required during the last little bit when you are manipulating the bleed valve while under pressure.
Or get yourselves one of the speed bleeders as shown above, then you can do it all by yourself in the same amount of time.
or, if you are Yoda-ish Jedi mindset .... that means dirt cheap to you youngsters who ain't been around long Paladin, do you stick a piece of clear tubing on the end of your bleeder valve nipple so you can clearly see your air bubbles stopping and starting and
you can clearly see when you fluid becomes all nice and clean and new? I find that a couple of feet of clear tubing, once it becomes full of fluid, it also acts as a check valve for the return stroke. I pump down by myself (spending my attention up top keeping the reservoir nice and full) and when I see a clear fluid stream in the tube (and no air bubbles) I finger tighen the valve until it will just barely pass fluid and give it a resistance squeeze or two at the lever and on the last one I clinch the bleeder valve off in mid stroke with my foot to make durn sure no air can get in on the return stroke.
(cause there ain't one, it got pinched off while still pushing)
So, using some clear tubing to act as your "check valve" can allow you to do it by yourself with complete assurance you have no air in your system.