i'm using rbf600... but chris at centrax told me that oil is not good for my car i dunno why?
Depends on the car, but RBF600 can swell the seals if you use it for long durations. It's great if you put it in a few weeks before a track day and then change it back to OEM fluid after.
This isn't a bad fluid..... however... I've heated it up in the past and had fluid fade so don't want to risk it again.
I've had Chris from centrax say the same thing to me in the past about the motul fluid. Apparently there was an issue with the motul fluid a few years back so he is right about that bulletin that went out about it.
Again.... I've used it for the last 3-4 years no issues, the one time I changed if over to the castrol fluid above....boiled it.
In fairness.... it was at the track last year that it happened, but that was after 1 session and the first lap out of the pits on the 2nd session. So the brakes where not that hot.
This isn't a bad fluid..... however... I've heated it up in the past and had fluid fade so don't want to risk it again.
I've had Chris from centrax say the same thing to me in the past about the motul fluid. Apparently there was an issue with the motul fluid a few years back so he is right about that bulletin that went out about it.
Again.... I've used it for the last 3-4 years no issues, the one time I changed if over to the castrol fluid above....boiled it.
In fairness.... it was at the track last year that it happened, but that was after 1 session and the first lap out of the pits on the 2nd session. So the brakes where not that hot.
Yup, it's a good street brake fluid. But not for track. When you compare the boiling points of the Castrol Super Response DOT4 and Motul RBF600, it's no comparison:
Castrol SR DOT4,
Dry: 280ºC
Wet: 186ºC
Motul RBF600,
Dry: 312ºC
Wet: 216ºC
That's a 30ºC advantage in both wet and dry, and it's also amazing that RBF600 being a DOT4 fluid actually has higher boiling points than a DOT5.1 fluid!
Yup, it's a good street brake fluid. But not for track. When you compare the boiling points of the Castrol Super Response DOT4 and Motul RBF600, it's no comparison:
Castrol SR DOT4,
Dry: 280ºC
Wet: 186ºC
Motul RBF600,
Dry: 312ºC
Wet: 216ºC
That's a 30ºC advantage in both wet and dry, and it's also amazing that RBF600 being a DOT4 fluid actually has higher boiling points than a DOT5.1 fluid!
Castrol used to make the GP600 Dot 4 brake fluid for street/track...
Dry: 310
Wet: 216
so comparable to the Motul, but unfortunately they don't make it anymore!
Between DOT4 and DOT5.1, the difference is the viscosity. DOT5.1's viscosity is much lower than DOT4 and can cause leaks in some systems. That is why RBF600 is still a DOT4 and not a DOT5.1, its viscosity is closer to that of a DOT4, while the boiling temps are that of a DOT5.1.
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