I tried to use a vacuum system to bleed my front brakes, and like you never got it to work the way I thought should have been possible.
I applied vacuum to both bleed nipples, cracked them open, then waited holding my bottle of DOT4 ready to keep the reservoir topped off as a nice stream of clean fresh fluid pulled down through the lines, right.?.?
Okay, nothing..
Next I try pulling the lever halfway, hold it, then full, hold it, nothing. Then I tried pumping the lever continuously, both half and full... nothing.
So I came back here to the mother-ship of MOTOBRICK.com and re-read a few posts, went back out with
filmcamera's 27 pump bleed technique fresh on the brain and decided to go for a more conventional bleed and just use the vacuum to suck up the mess. At first, still nothing, similar to your description. So I bled the line to the top of the forks using the banjo bolt like a bleed nipple, then bled it to the bottom of the fork tube where it splits to the two front calipers. **IMPORTANT** Up to this point, the lever never made any "pressure", just a methodical routine of pulling the lever with the pipe open, close pipe, release lever. Rinse & Repeat.
After getting fluid to the split, the lever started to make pressure again and bleeding the calipers went pretty straight forward after that point. Pump lever, crack one bleed nipple, close nipple before lever bottoms out. Rinse & Repeat till no bubbles then move to the other caliper.
I left my vacuum rig connected to the bleed nipples with clear tubing so it would suck up all the fluid and give me a clear view of any bubbles exiting the caliper.
I think the machine you see in the service manual works more with pressure from the M/C down to the calipers. It seems to me that the vacuum leaks around the seals in caliper or even the threads of the loosened nipple before overcoming the restrictions in the M/C piston and seals. Or my rig is an insufficient vacuum level to achieve fluid pull through. I was running 28-29 inHg though so... :dunno2: