ichthos said:
Are you saying that if I switch to a synthetic brake fluid with the same rating, or switch to a higher DOT rated brake fluid it will cause less damage to paint?
DOT 5 silicone brake fluid will not damage any paint. It does have some other disadvantages, like being slightly harder to work with and slightly more compressible (especially at high temperatures); but other advantages as well.<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:] If this is true, why would someone use anything else?[/QUOTE] For one thing, it's not what was recommended originally. Girling, Apple Hydraulics, and AFAIK all modern car makers are on record as saying it's not what the brakes were designed for, and they cannot/will not guarantee performance with it.
For another, it's much more expensive and difficult to find (although TRF sells a quart for about $25).<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:] Can't you damage rubber parts by using various DOT rated brake fluids?[/QUOTE]There is a problem with some older formulation seals, that some modern brake fluids will attack them. Not really a DOT rated issue, since the DOT standards only measure performance with one type of seal. Evidence would seem to suggest that "natural rubber" seals have not been made for a long time though, so it's unlikely you'll have a problem with new seals (and I wouldn't use NOS seals anyway). However, AFAIK, all DOT 5 silicone fluids are safe with the old natural rubber seals.
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:] Isn't one drawback of using the silicon fluid that it can cause a spongy effect with the brakes?[/QUOTE]It does result in slightly more pedal travel, especially when the brakes get very hot. But Nelson Riedel calculated the additional travel to be less than 1/2" at a temperature where DOT3 would already have failed completely (boiled), which IMO is minimal enough to not be a problem. I've attached an article he wrote on the subject some time ago.
DOT 5 also has more of a tendency to get tiny bubbles of air in it, if you agitate it in air (like when adding to the MC). I've found that just waiting for a bit after adding to the MC is enough to prevent the problem; but some folks have gotten the aerated fluid into their systems where it's hard to get out.
I've run DOT 5 in all my Triumphs and most of my other cars for over 20 years now; and I simply love the stuff. My incidence of brake problems is far lower than it was running glycol (among other things, DOT 5 does not need to be changed every few years, and does not promote corrosion like glycol does), and when I do get leaks I just mop them up with no damage to paint or anything. Bought a new Chevy in 1980, converted it to DOT 5 at the first sign of brake trouble (1988), and it went to it's grave in 2003 still with all the original brake components and seals (except the one caliper that started to leak with the original DOT 4). Not bad for a car that CR rated one of the "ten worst US cars" /bcforum/images/%%GRAEMLIN_URL%%/smile.gif
YMMV of course.