I actually was going to suggest Castrol, but I haven't seen the Castrol brake fluid available anywhere for at least a few years. Even Amazon doesn't carry it
What did you replace the Supertech with? OEM Toyota? Castrol? Something else? And did the green come back?
I replaced it with Castrol at the time.
I had brake hose issue that cause me to lose most of the castrol. Maybe there's some left in the rear brake lines that still have some color, but it has been contaminated with new Supertech because the brake pipes decide to take leak after being disturbed(and me messing up the removal a bit).
So the only sure comparison was with Toyota OEM. The Toyota was not clear, but it wasn't heavy green either. A modest yellow-ish brown but the car was bought in 2007 and the replacement was in the mid-to-late 2010s. I guess the amine and polyalkene glycol ether might take on water, but be more resilient.
Castrol uses an amine too, different from Toyota. Toyota's bottle mentions Di-n-butylamine. I recall finding one google site that states it is an anti corrosion chemical. I checked Castrol's MSDS and they have Di-isopropanolamine.
Related to Toyota, Advics sells a brake fluid. Curious about the difference between them and Toyota OEM, I got a vague but not incomprehensible response.
The email.
The formulations of the ADVICS DOT 3 brake fluid and Toyota OEM DOT 3 brake fluid are very similar but they are not the exact same formulation, and I cannot speak to the specific differences as the Toyota fluid formulation is proprietary.
However, I can state that the ADVICS DOT 3 brake fluid formula has been approved by a major Asian OEM brand as well as a major Detroit 3 OEM brand. Also, when benchmarked against other OEM brands, the ADVICS DOT 3 brake fluid outperforms many of the OEM brands.
When researching brake fluid, the two main points to consider are the wet and dry boiling points. Typically, the higher the boiling points for each of these two categories indicate a higher quality fluid.
So I guess if someone is buying one American car brand, they're buying closet "Toyota-influenced brake fluid". My speculative guess for the Detroit automaker is GM because of their past relationship with Toyota. But who knows, maybe the Motorcraft fluid is Advics' sauce.
Given my experience with the Supertech, I can see why OEMs go for something better. Brake fluid is going to be neglected and whatever simpler formulation Supertech has, it might go too fast and then a class action lawsuit can occur. Tubing rusting, calipers seizing, seals failing, loss of braking ability after prolonged use.
Maybe do the BITOG thing and send samples to a lab?
I'm planning to go OEM Toyota because I'm about to install a new brake calilper. At least for an initial session, it's best to replicate factory conditions.