Brake fluids .... More useless information
There are two types - Synthetic (Polyglcol ether based ) and Silicone types. THEY WILL NOT MIX (honest)
the designations are as follows:
DOT 3 - Polyglcol Synthetic - this is a conventional fluid in general use
DOT 4 - Polyglcol Synthetic - similar to DOT 3 but better qualities regarding oil absorption and a higher boiling point.
DOT 5.1 - Polyglcol Synthetic, as DOT 4 but even higher boiling point!
DOT 5.0 is the Silicone based Fluid - Beware !
Basically Polyglycol fluids are the norm - available widely. You can mix DOT 3/4 and 5.1 fluids ( although not recommended as it can compromise the benefits of the higher spec fluid )
Polyglycol fluids are Hygroscopic - this means they absorb water which is one of the reasons your brakes can go spongy and you should change your brake fluid at least every two years - also the water could cause internal corrosion or your braking system. PAG fluids will also damage paint so be careful.
Silicone fluids - basically don't know why you'd use these - they can give you spongy brakes even with new fluid, have lower boiling points than DOT4 fluids, then again, they don't ruin your paint if you're a clumsy type, they don't absorb water (although any water collecting in the fluid will "puddle" causing corrosion) Silicone fluids normally have a purplish tinge to them where Polyglycol types are more straw coloured
If you change from one type to the other, (Polyglycol to Silicone, NOT DOT3 - DOT4 / 5.1 ) you'll need to completely flush and clean the system and best to change all the seals at the same time.
For everyday use, DOT 4 is fine, for racing or really heavy brake usage; go for a high boiling point such as Super DOT 4 or even a race fluid like Castrol SRF Racing brake fluid (similar properties to DOT 4 but for use where extreme braking conditions are encountered.
Silicone fluids don't absorb water and don't ruin your paint - but they can cause water to puddle causing localised corrosion and you can get spongy brakes even with new fluid - and if they get water in you can get a vapour lock.
Boiling points – typical
DOT 3 245 degrees
DOT 4 256 degrees
Super DOT 4 280 degrees
SRF Racing 300+ degrees
Silicone fluids - 260 degrees
Hope that's useful?
Last edited by Spokey; 22-10-08 at 02:54 PM.
Reason: spelling .... again !
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