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Silicone Brake Fluid

To: "'mgs@autox.team.net'" <mgs@Autox.Team.Net>
Subject: Silicone Brake Fluid
From: Chris Kotting <ckotting@iwaynet.net>
Date: Tue, 16 Sep 1997 08:50:05 -0400
I've been pretty much "lurking" on this list for a while, but I have both 
good and bad personal experience with silicone brake fluid on various cars, 
so I thought I'd throw in my observations.

Changing to DOT 5 Silicone brake fluid is a good idea IF:
1)  You're already tearing down the hydraulics anyway, and will be 
replacing the affected seals, flexible hoses, etc. and cleaning out the 
reservoirs.
2)  Your brake light switch is actuated mechanically by the pedal, rather 
than by hydraulic pressure.

Changing to DOT 5 Silicone brake fluid is a bad idea if either of the above 
conditions are false, because:
1a)  It won't help make bad seals seal any better, and may make things 
worse.
1b)  Mixing Silicone fluid with the remains of Lockheed or Castrol can make 
a nasty mess.
2)   Sooner or later, a little bit of any brake fluid will make its way 
inside a hydraulically actuated switch.  Silicone is a GREAT insulator.

I have seen people rap silicone because they got a hold of a car where the 
DPO put silicone into an ignored, already pitted, leaking, swollen-hosed 
brake system.  The problem wasn't the silicone brake fluid, the problem was 
the DPO.

By the way, make VERY sure you don't have any traces of silicone fluid on 
your shoes when you walk across your wife's new Armstrong Solarian kitchen 
floor, unless it already features random purple blotches.  (A 
non-automotive bad experience with silicone brake fluid.)

Chris Kotting
ckotting@iwaynet.net
'77 MG Midget "Martha"
'93 Saturn Wagon

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