Castrol SRF brake fluid in road going Elan
5 posts
• Page 1 of 1
I'm about to fill my brake & clutch system for the first time (all new components & lines, etc) and when I read through some posts I see Castrol SRF being highly regarded by the boy racers (old fart racers... now;-) voom voom!
While Castrol SRF is pretty expensive, im looking on it as, good insurance. I noticed when the car was on the road a few year back, that while I sat in traffic in the hot california sun; the clutch would become very difficult to engage. I thought this was because of the close proximity of the clutch slave cylinder to the exhaust maniford. It only happened in slow traffic on very hot days. The problem disappeared when I got moving and air circulating around the important little parts.
Castrol SRF has a much higher boiling point than typical brake fluids and think this may be a good application.
Thoughts, ideas, your 2 cents worth?
Thanks
James
While Castrol SRF is pretty expensive, im looking on it as, good insurance. I noticed when the car was on the road a few year back, that while I sat in traffic in the hot california sun; the clutch would become very difficult to engage. I thought this was because of the close proximity of the clutch slave cylinder to the exhaust maniford. It only happened in slow traffic on very hot days. The problem disappeared when I got moving and air circulating around the important little parts.
Castrol SRF has a much higher boiling point than typical brake fluids and think this may be a good application.
Thoughts, ideas, your 2 cents worth?
Thanks
James
-
holywood3645 - Fourth Gear
- Posts: 890
- Joined: 07 Oct 2003
SRF or other competition brake fluid is probably overkill for the application. Regularly changng with fresh good quality fluid should be sufficient for any road car.
Changng your fluid one a year is better than buying an expensive competition fluid and not changing it on the same time basis
regards
Rohan
Changng your fluid one a year is better than buying an expensive competition fluid and not changing it on the same time basis
regards
Rohan
-
rgh0 - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 8409
- Joined: 22 Sep 2003
Thanks for the reply. But what about my clutch problem in traffic on hot days?
Do you think the higher boiling temp.would help. SRF is 70USD /ltr over here
James
Do you think the higher boiling temp.would help. SRF is 70USD /ltr over here
James
-
holywood3645 - Fourth Gear
- Posts: 890
- Joined: 07 Oct 2003
holywood3645 wrote:Thanks for the reply. But what about my clutch problem in traffic on hot days?
Why not put a heat shield over the slave cylinder? Cheap and easy.
Brian Clarke
(1972 Sprint 5 EFI)
Growing old is mandatory..........Growing up is optional
(1972 Sprint 5 EFI)
Growing old is mandatory..........Growing up is optional
-
bcmc33 - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 1708
- Joined: 10 Apr 2006
I suspect your clutch problem was water absorption into the fluid. Change the fluid for fresh standard fluid and it should be ok.
The steel clutch line to exhaust header clearance on my elan was around 2mm but i never have any problem with the clutch. I use standard DOT 3 fluid in the clutch. i am just in the process of fitting a TTR header and this increases the clearance to around 5mm
cheers
Rohan
The steel clutch line to exhaust header clearance on my elan was around 2mm but i never have any problem with the clutch. I use standard DOT 3 fluid in the clutch. i am just in the process of fitting a TTR header and this increases the clearance to around 5mm
cheers
Rohan
-
rgh0 - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 8409
- Joined: 22 Sep 2003
5 posts
• Page 1 of 1
Total Online:
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 17 guests