How often do you change the brake fluid?
#1
Burning Brakes
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How often do you change the brake fluid?
Do you guys change the brake fliud after every event or once a season..I know to change it if it gets black or dark but is there any recommendation out there.........and do you bleed it before each event..I use motul 600 is that good or is there better.........
trapp
trapp
#2
Platinum Supporting Vendor
Must bleed before each event, and sometimes during events if you are having issues. As far as changing it, we recommend you do it every 5-6 events, you can never change it or bleed it too much so why do it often?
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#3
Burning Brakes
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#4
Platinum Supporting Vendor
We use the Wilwood fluid that we sell. Good boiling points and low cost.
Here are other good options: http://www.stoptech.com/tech_info/wp...mparison.shtml
Here are other good options: http://www.stoptech.com/tech_info/wp...mparison.shtml
#5
Race Director
I flush it once a year in spring. Then bleed just a pump or two from each caliper after each track day. I do this to check each corner, brake pad and rotor condition, etc. I've been at events where the instructors asked if anyone inspected their brake system after yesterdays track time, and I was the only one.
#6
Team Owner
Depends on how hot you get the brakes SRF is the best fluid. More money but last longer so don't look at price strictly. Second cheaper choice I would take Wilwood brand. Bleed off between each event if you run hard and hot.
#8
Racer
they need to get rid of that trash T14 and create a sweeper on to the front straight off the back short chute. all you do is drag race, park, drag race, park but just changing that 1 corner would help a ton
I do a flush about twice a year, a kiss bleed usually before each day
#9
Le Mans Master
#10
Burning Brakes
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St. Jude Donor '10-'11
I overdo it ... drive like a wuss and still bleed off end of each track day.
Motul 600
But then I've never had a braking problem either ...
SS lines, drm ducts, hose & spindle mounts, titanium backing plates, now SS pistons in calipers
Motul 600
But then I've never had a braking problem either ...
SS lines, drm ducts, hose & spindle mounts, titanium backing plates, now SS pistons in calipers
#11
Safety Car
Motul RBF600 is a good fluid. I bleed before every event when I'm swapping pads in, and since I drive my car on the street I often bleed after the event when swapping back to the street pads. I tend to over-bleed... brakes are important so I'd rather spend a bit more by bleeding through more fluid. Another reason I've stuck with the RBF600 rather than going SRF.
#12
I use valvoline syn and bleed before every event... if I cook the brakes, I will beed after the event and then again before... but there is normally 45 days between events for me. And I drive my car on the street often
#13
Drifting
Motul 600 in my C6 Z, bleed before every track DAY (not weekend), and flush every 3 events or 3 months, whichever is less. Tried one time waiting 6 months to flush when I hadn't run an event in 7 months, and boiling the fluid on the 5th lap. Its scary having the pedal go halfway to the floor before grabbing when you're doing 170+ mph.
#14
Burning Brakes
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Motul 600 in my C6 Z, bleed before every track DAY (not weekend), and flush every 3 events or 3 months, whichever is less. Tried one time waiting 6 months to flush when I hadn't run an event in 7 months, and boiling the fluid on the 5th lap. Its scary having the pedal go halfway to the floor before grabbing when you're doing 170+ mph.
I would be flushing more then my brakes doing 170 on a straight.. I hit maybe 130-135 tops on the tracks I run but they are limited in the striaghts..
Last edited by trapp; 07-13-2010 at 09:41 PM.
#15
Drifting
I'm crazy, but not that crazy. It was a full blown road course set up at an airfield. The back straight was a section of runway with some chicanes built into it. If I lost it, the worst would be to go off in the grass (which was very flat). The crazy part of the layout was 170+ with a 30 mph left hand 180 degree hairpin at the end. Thus the hammered brakes.
I did observe, though, that it doesn't matter how flat the grass runoff is when the guys wrenching on your car forget to tighten the wheel lugs. 997 911 GT3 RS on Michelin slicks (who couldn't catch me, BTW ) lost a wheel that way and shattered one of his carbon-ceramic rotors on his way into the grass.
I did observe, though, that it doesn't matter how flat the grass runoff is when the guys wrenching on your car forget to tighten the wheel lugs. 997 911 GT3 RS on Michelin slicks (who couldn't catch me, BTW ) lost a wheel that way and shattered one of his carbon-ceramic rotors on his way into the grass.