I made a set of brake pads myself to clean out the discs, they are old worn out brake pads back plates with fine grinding stones riveted to them. I install them and drive the car - in a very safe place very slowly - as the braking power is nearly zero, this deglazes and trues a slightly warped disc too.
Install new pads - with coppaslip on the backs - silicone grease on the sliding pins and we are good to go.
For a brake flush, I made it from a flower/garden spray bottle that you can pump up to 20 psi - and a brake reservoir cap with a hole in it.
For easy one man bleeding - take an old jam jar with lid - drill a hole in it and pass a junk brake line tube through it till its nearly at the bottom; solder it on the lid too fill with brake so it just sits above the line. get some clear tube that can slip on the brake line and bleed nipple. Grease bleed nipple so no air can get sucked in - attach clear pipe to bleed nipple and loosen the nipple. fill the brake bottle in the engine room, start engine and start to pump slowly - dont push to the floor, you may rupture an old master cylinders seals like that - you will push oil brake fluid into the jam bottle and see any bubbles if there was air. Be careful not to empty the fluid container on the master cylinder. Or you would be bleeding it all over again. Its far better than dabao choro dabao choro.