Apologies for chipping in here - I am not a GS owner, but my motorcycle has a pretty complex braking system with linked brakes, proportional control valves, delay valves, secondary master cylinder and plenty of places where air likes to hide away.
Basically, you can go round the entire system with one way bleed valves or vacuum pumps and bleed it until no more bubbles come out of the bleed tube, and the brakes still feel spongey. As for pressure feeding, for my bike it is not advised due to the nature of the plumbing and the need to get rid of stale or contaminated fluid from all of the 'stagnant' areas. Pushing it against the flow doesn't work very well.
For vacuum bleeders, PTFE tape on the bleed valves threads is a must, but you can't completely stop the air from sucking past the threads. What you can do though, is get a good constant flow of fluid which leaves both hands free to help encourage the air traps to detach from the hose sides and the joints into the flow of fluid. Otherwise, quite large air bubbles will stay trapped. And they will not be where you might expect them to be.
Once happy the vacuum pump is not getting any more out, I go round with the one-way valve in a standard bleed tube, to be sure that no more tiny bubbles are in the system.
As for the air traps - I had a pretty good picture in my head of where these would be, and decided to write it up. I must have had a moment of inspiration, because I decided to check that what I had written was actually what happened inside the tube, and set up a simple experiment or two. One was blowing pressure into a container (by mouth) to force coloured water down the tube which had a join, and was taking a sinuous route to the waste container. The other was a simple n bend of clear tube, and I sucked the coloured water through from the other end. What I discovered, was not what I was expecting.
Watch the videos. Not that very large bubbles - not at the top of a bend, but in the vertical drops; in the bottom of a bend and attached to the joint in the tube - simply do not shift unless helped. Ditto, bubbles attached to the side of the tube. They need a flick with the finger, or a pretty sharp clout with a spanner.
Now I know what the bubbles do, I can chase them around the plumbing to the nearest bleed valve, and my brakes always feel rock solid.
Anyway, I think you might find them interesting. Note that in both videos, the fluid is flowing all of the time, although it looks to be stationary at times, it isn't.