Volume of brake fluid in the lines?
Discussion
Can anyone tell me roughly what volume of brake fluid would need to be flushed through the lines to be sure the line is completely flushed? Obviously it is going to be slightly different for each corner.
I am changing the fluid and I'm not confident I will be able to see the difference in colour from the old fluid and the new fluid.
I am changing the fluid and I'm not confident I will be able to see the difference in colour from the old fluid and the new fluid.
Edited by rotorwings on Tuesday 5th July 09:32
assuming that the internal diameter of a 4.5mm solid brake line is 2.5mm, and assuming you have 4 x 2m runs from the master cylinder, then this equates to about 40 cm3 of fluid. You also have the fluid in the caliper behind the pistons, and the master cylinder to consider. I reckon flushing through 100 cm3 should have new fluid throughout. Try a few drops of blue food dye?
Good point on how to calculate the actual volume. Maths is magic! 
Also a good point on using a full 500ml bottle. I thought I might need a litre, so it is good to know that using a 500ml bottle will definitely cover it (according to the maths and general advice). I already have a fresh 500ml bottle here, so that's perfect.
Thanks all.

Also a good point on using a full 500ml bottle. I thought I might need a litre, so it is good to know that using a 500ml bottle will definitely cover it (according to the maths and general advice). I already have a fresh 500ml bottle here, so that's perfect.
Thanks all.
Maths is good, but my unscientific advice is that there is a lot less volume in the pipes than you imagine. Even filling from empty you get fluid appearing at the caliper incredibly quickly.
If you want to do a thorough job then you can wind-back the rear calipers. This will reduce the volume in the cylinders that needs to be flushed. It is a lot more faff though and is really only useful when filling from empty to prevent bubbles getting trapped.
If you want to do a thorough job then you can wind-back the rear calipers. This will reduce the volume in the cylinders that needs to be flushed. It is a lot more faff though and is really only useful when filling from empty to prevent bubbles getting trapped.
spanky3 said:
water-based dye in brake lines.. is that wise?
two or three drops in 500ml will change the colour, but will have a negligible effect on the wet boiling point of fresh fluid.look at the diff between the wet and dry BP of most fluids, then check what the test is to determine "wet". A few drops of food dye won't turn dry (fresh) fluid into a "wet" state.
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