I reckon I can hold off on the jokes given the situation
gregsters right about bleeding em if you sure of no leaks.
A few questions that might help:
How worn were the brakes? As the piston moves out as the brakes wear, it takes more fluid and just might have drained the resevoir, bringing some air with it. Very rare though and takes a combination of four quite worn sets of pads and discs with an initally slightly lower brake fluid level.
Did this happen before or after the brake work?
On some cars (Yes, I'm looking at you, Vauxhall!!) Pushing the piston back without opening the bleed nipple runs the risk of inverting a seal in the master cylinder. This allows all the fluid you push towqrd the brakes when breaking to return when you release the pedal. This increases the distance between the pad and disc aswell as allowing fluid to rush past the seal making the pedal travel to the floor, or near as one side of the tandem collapses while the other works. With the engine off the force exerted by the pedal is actually not enough to make the now useless seal fail right away, and you can pump up a nice hard pedal for yourself. If that happens, the only option is to get a seal set or replace the cylinder assembly.
Lastly, the daft question as I'm not sure around servos them selves. I get how they use vacuum to work, but is there some kind of limiting device in them to stop them from over working? Could that fail meaning a new servo? Sorry for the story, should probably work on shortening them
And very finally.. What number and combination of letters adorns the bonnet of your truck? Some say there is a certain combination that's literally the death of any vehicle unlucky enough to have it..... I know Renault is one. There are a small few others....
