Firstly – rabbits sleep during the day. It is morning and evening that they are most active. Mine settle doen to sleep by 9am, and wake up around 5pm. Then they eat, poop/pee, snooze some more, and by 7pm they are getting real active. While I am asleep, they are the most active.
Second – Read through the bonding journals here. There are many different experiences. It will five you an idea of how long the process can take. Sometimes it is quick, sometimes not.
Third – Bonding must take place in a small, neutral area. Your bedroom is not neutral. Until they are bonded, you will need to house them separately. And then have a third area for bonding, that neither of them have been in before. I find the living arrangements.bonding areas the most tricky part of housing bunnies that aren’t bonded yet. I don’t know what your house setup is, but the general advice is to house them close enough to see each other and get to know each other for a few weeks. Like maybe have their playpens 6 inches apart. Not close enough to fight through the fence. If your current bun is used to having the whole room, try sectioning it off, so he as 1/4, the new bun has 1/4, and you still have space to do your stuff. Use a third bonding area – small – in a completely separate room that neither have been in.
If you try to bond free range – there is too much space, and they bunnies will have a lot of space to charge and attack. Plus – your current bun sees your room as his. So he might not be happy about a new comer invading his space.