Hello Guest User,

Please feel free to have a look around the forum but be aware that as an unregistered guest you can't see all of it and you can't post.

To access these 'Registered Users Only' areas simply register and login.

Dot 5 brake fluid

Need help restoring, building, or finding then try here.

Moderators: KeithZ1R, chrisu, paul doran, Taffus

Message
Author
User avatar
nealblath
100Club
100Club
Posts: 157
Joined: 24th Jun 2007
Location: near Selby, North Yorkshire

Dot 5 brake fluid

#1 PostAuthor: nealblath » Wed May 30, 2012 8:26 am

anyone ever used it in a Z?

supposed to be non corrosive, ie, won't damage paint. Just wondered because I have had to touch up the paint on the calipers already where a small amount of fluid drippeed onto the calipers while bleeding them.

not recommended for ABS brakes but should be fine on a Z

Eric Frith
Regular Poster
Posts: 30
Joined: 12th Apr 2012
Location: Hertford

#2 PostAuthor: Eric Frith » Wed May 30, 2012 8:34 am

Dot 5 is non corrosive and will not harm the paint, Dot 5.1 is corrosive though.

I use Dot 5 wherever possible

User avatar
nealblath
100Club
100Club
Posts: 157
Joined: 24th Jun 2007
Location: near Selby, North Yorkshire

#3 PostAuthor: nealblath » Wed May 30, 2012 9:03 am

Eric Frith wrote:Dot 5 is non corrosive and will not harm the paint, Dot 5.1 is corrosive though.

I use Dot 5 wherever possible


yes I noticed that Eric.........apparently 5.1 has additives that make it corrosive

just ordered a bottle of Dot 5

User avatar
zed1015
Hardcore
Hardcore
Posts: 2319
Joined: 2nd Nov 2005
Location: Somewhere between Scunny and Goole.

#4 PostAuthor: zed1015 » Wed May 30, 2012 10:30 am

You can't just re-bleed the system with dot 5.
You must totally strip the braking system and remove all traces of dot 4 if going over to 5.
Also you will most likely have to replace all the seals too in the calipers and master cyl.
4 and 5 don't play well together (glycol v/s silicone) and will mix to form a sludge even in the tiniest amounts.

User avatar
nealblath
100Club
100Club
Posts: 157
Joined: 24th Jun 2007
Location: near Selby, North Yorkshire

#5 PostAuthor: nealblath » Wed May 30, 2012 12:56 pm

zed1015 wrote:You can't just re-bleed the system with dot 5.
You must totally strip the braking system and remove all traces of dot 4 if going over to 5.
Also you will most likely have to replace all the seals too in the calipers and master cyl.
4 and 5 don't play well together (glycol v/s silicone) and will mix to form a sludge even in the tiniest amounts.


ok Rob........will strip system fully down first

Rich
Hardcore
Hardcore
Posts: 2835
Joined: 4th Mar 2003

#6 PostAuthor: Rich » Wed May 30, 2012 7:01 pm

seconded for new seals and full strip
Rich
diplomacy is a form of art - I was never any good at art

User avatar
jimmock
Hardcore
Hardcore
Posts: 8947
Joined: 1st Dec 2009
Location: Central Scotland, near Zedinburgh.

#7 PostAuthor: jimmock » Wed May 30, 2012 10:03 pm

Rich wrote:seconded for new seals and full strip


I quite fancy the "full strip" part!!


Jimmock.
Jimmock. :wnkr


SPEED IS JUST A QUESTION OF MONEY...HOW FAST DO 'YOU' WANT TO GO?

I hate people I don't like !

User avatar
Garn 1
ZedHead
ZedHead
Posts: 1234
Joined: 23rd Sep 2005
Location: Sydney

#8 PostAuthor: Garn 1 » Wed May 30, 2012 10:35 pm

NealB, a question I have often asked and never received a logical answer.
If dot 5 is so good, why doesn't all new bikes have it?
Perhaps, it is as you say "not recommended for ABS brakes".
Is that the only reason?
RegardZ
Garn (Sydney) Z1, Z1A, Z1B and Z900-A4

HowieD
100Club
100Club
Posts: 336
Joined: 5th Feb 2008
Location: Lincoln

#9 PostAuthor: HowieD » Wed May 30, 2012 10:42 pm

There are some explanations here:

http://moodle.student.cnwl.ac.uk/moodledata_shared/cdx%20etextbook/dswmedia/brakes/brake/comp/brakefluid.html

http://www.bikersoracle.com/gs/forum/showthread.php?t=470

I still use DOT4 on my completely new brakes and Hyd Clutch..

regards
Howie
CD185, Maggot, Z1-R, Horace

User avatar
Garn 1
ZedHead
ZedHead
Posts: 1234
Joined: 23rd Sep 2005
Location: Sydney

#10 PostAuthor: Garn 1 » Wed May 30, 2012 11:35 pm

Thanks HowieD, good explanations, particularly from BMW GS forum. I'm in the market for a F800Gs 2009 -2010... one day!
RegardZ.
Garn (Sydney) Z1, Z1A, Z1B and Z900-A4

gray
100Club
100Club
Posts: 198
Joined: 22nd Mar 2006

#11 PostAuthor: gray » Sun Jun 03, 2012 9:18 pm

On the other hand....
15 years ago I owned a Corvette stingray ( '69 L46 350/350 smallblock T roof) with terrible caliper corrosion so I got a stainless calipers kit from the US. Came with litres and litres of silicone brake fluid and I had plenty left over at the end so i got most of the old fluid out of my Z9 and refilled with the new stuff.
No problems at all , and it didn't "age" and go murky and cloudy like Dot 3/4 does. No problem with the seals and I wasn't superfastidious about the changeover. only went back to dot4 when i ran out of it .( so that was 35-40K miles of use.)
gray

hx35w

#12 PostAuthor: hx35w » Mon Jun 11, 2012 2:42 am

Garn 1 wrote:NealB, a question I have often asked and never received a logical answer.
If dot 5 is so good, why doesn't all new bikes have it?
Perhaps, it is as you say "not recommended for ABS brakes".
Is that the only reason?
RegardZ


Dot 5 will be spongy because it will compress more than glycol based fluid.
Dot 5 is more likely to draw more condensation than other fluids.
Dot 5 is prone to having microscopic bubbles more easily in-trained witch adds to the spongy feeling. Not to mention, It's not cheap.

Does have a higher boiling point.
It also works as a grate replacement for armor all. It will last much longer and make rubber,vinyl, and engine paint look new.


Return to “Bike Help”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 13 guests