NXTGENAutomotive
Peak Sponsor (Level 2)
- Joined
- Jun 12, 2024
- Threads
- 19
- Messages
- 235
- Reaction score
- 219
- Location
- Carlsbad, CA
- Vehicle(s)
- 2 Jeeps and a BMW
We are all welcome to do exactly as we please with our Jeeps. I'm just trying to help the OP make an educated choice and this is factually inaccurate.Dot 4 is more hydroscopic than dot 3. Good thing our Jeeps never see water! That being said, our Jeeps will never generate the heat as vehicles on the track. As a daily driver, Dot 4 will work but not needed.
OP, stick with Dot 3. You will not benefit or feel a difference.
1) The braking system is a closed, sealed system and subjecting the Jeep to water has no impact on what braking fluid you use.
2) Dot 4 has a higher boiling point, and the moisture that is being generated is from the heating of the fluid. The closer you get to the fluids boiling points ( wet and dry), the more moisture you will be subjecting it to. Although dot 4 will need to be replaced more often, you should be generating less moisture technically speaking with dot 4 vs 3. The boiling point differences are notable and even 1 really hard stomp on the brakes in an emergency with a full load in the bed or a trailer could easily foul the Dot 3.
3) Dot 4 is definitely not a track fluid, at least not today. Beyond our Jeeps, we own and tune some pretty high performance BMWs, some well over 700Hp. If those cars were going to the track, Dot 4 would NOT be the fluid in 2025. We would use Dot 5.1 (Dot 5 is not compatible with 3 or 4 and 5.1 is).
4) Dot 4 is simply a more modern and higher performance replacement for DOT 3. That 100% does not mean track use. Dot 3 is a very basic fluid, and Dot 4 has benefits for towing, hauling, high speed stopping on the hwy, and repeated hard braking on the trials. These are all higher performance uses that are a great fit for Dot 4 over 3 and for sure apply to our Jeeps. There is no downside to using Dot 4 other than it needs to be replaced more often. If you are towing, or wheeling often, more frequent changes are not the worst thing anyway, unless it is a leased vehicle, then YOLO...
You will feel a difference if you regularly apply the brakes under a load with a higher performance fluid.
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