It's hilarious what you can find on forums.
Two pages in, and it's still the gift that keeps giving:
It's a semi self regulating problem. Don't change the fluid. Then calipers and cylinders corrode and start to leak. New fluid gets added when the level gets low and when brake components get prematurely changed.
This is my favorite.
The same reason that oil floats on top of water. Water has a higher specific gravity than brake fluid, so when it falls out of suspension due to over-saturation of the brake fluid, it tends to migrate to the lowest point in the system.
Then again this is golden too. We need more of these. Seems in the world of BITOG no one notices he's joshing with you all.
Ahem...
Made with glycol - look it up - brake-fluid is hygroscopic / water miscible. It's made to be water-miscible exactly to stop most of what's written in this thread from happening or even being possible. Brake-fluid doesn't behave as you all seem to think it does.
Doubt these words? It's written in the DOT standard.
Only this is BITOG. and we're two pages in on the BS. The rectum is in full force.
"What?... read the DOT Standard. A chemist wrote that, what would he know?"
How it ACTUALLY works - and WHY the DOT Standard is there:
Fluid gets wettest and degrades fastest where the heat-cycle is greatest - at the caliper. Fluid will not mix / circulate via the reservoir to get where fresh fluid is most required. There's nothing to make it move that far.
This means accurate fluids tests require sample(s) from the caliper. And testers.... (if electrical) must be calibrated to your brand of fluid. Such a tester will be very pricey. This is why the good testers work by heating to the boil-point. Dip-strips are a fair way to good, but cost about the price of brake-fluid. And by the tme you've tested at the caliper - you might flush?
If you think you can test fluid - or flush - soley at the reservoir end, and still maintain you're doing some good, change your library book.
Because whilst a flush is best - do what the rest of the world does. Whn you wait long enough, fluid goes to acid. Thus acid enough to corrode and tear seals. Messrs eBay has a new caliper / ABS unit for you.
If instead of changing fluid - and it's cheap enough - you're set on a mickey-mouse fluid test there's a pyramid selling / ponsi scheme / time-share for you.
maybe a special doo-dad, for 150mpg and 700bhp. Only $30.
Read the standard... most of what is written here is at best ill considered, or worse actually impossible. Brake-fluid doesn't behave as you all seem to think it does