Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

I have searched but couldn't really come up with much info except the Motul seems to be really good.

However, one workshop reccomends the AP Racing even though it has lower boiling temps than the Motul because APPARENTLY, the Motul's can overheat easily, especially after a few hard laps on track.

Also, just wondering if they give good pedal feel ie. firm feel when braking.

Thanks in advance.

I used to pay $$11ty for the Castrol SRF and after a while I got over paying that much so I tried the Motul RBF600.

I can't say I have noticed any difference between the 2 and can't fault the RBF600 at all. I really don't see why people would pay more for a brake fluid when that stuff does the job perfectly.

I've used both AP 600 and Motul 600, both are good and never found a problem with sprint races upto 15laps in 1200kg GTSt or 1550kg GTR.

AP is $55 locally and Motul is $25... I now only use Motul for obvious reasons!

If you want the Motul fluid the best places to go looking are the motorbike shops. For some reason they carry Motul gear.

Also it is dot 4 (600) Which means it is much better than the run of the mill dot 4 fluid. The 600 is its boiling point in degrees fahrenheit.

Stuff paying $55 for 500ml.

Someone will be along in a minute to tell you about the Penzoil gear.

Edited by djr81

In Australia Motul has primarily been a bike brand... only in the last 5-6 years has it been pushed to cars.

Link International used to sponsor my Skyline when they were promoting the expansion.

Its always been big in Europe for both cars and bikes though.

yes, pretty funny. have a look at the bottle. ap,motul,penrite. sanme bottle. just differant lable and colour. all the same in my book. srf is just spastic expencive. we noticed no differance in the utes. (tested back to back)

we melt pistons in the calipers before it boils the penrite stuff.

motul rbf 600 is a DOT 4 only fully synthitic

motul DOT 5.1 is dot 5.1

im useing the dot 5.1 in the r31 and useing it at track days and it good

Why would you use the 5.1?

Brake Fluid..............Dry Boiling Point................Wet Boiling Point

Motul RBF 600..................593°F...............................420°F

Motul DOT 5.1..................509°F...............................365°F

Edited by djr81

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Here is the mess that I made. That filler there was successful in filling dents in that area. But in the middle area. I can feel dents. And I've gone ocer it multiple times with filler. And the filler is no longer there because i accidently sanded it away. I've chased my tail on this job but this is something else lol. So I'm gonna attempt filler one more time and if it doesn't work I'll just high fill primer the door and see where the issues are because guidecoat is of no use atm.
    • Ok, so I think I sort of figured out where I went wrong. So I definitely overthinked it, and I over sanded, which is probably a large part of the problem. to fix it, I ended up tapping some spots that were likely to be high, made them low, filled them in, and I tackled small sections at a time, and it feels a lot better.    I think what confused me as well is you have the bare metal, and some spots darker and some are lighter, and when I run my finger across it, it' would feel like it's a low spot, but I think it's just a transition in different texture from metal to body filler.    When your finger's sliding on the body filler, and crosses over to the bare metal, going back and forth, it feels like it's a low spot. So I kept putting filler there and sanding, but I think it was just a transition in texture, nothing to do with the low or high spot. But the panel's feels a lot better, and I'm just going to end up priming it, and then I'll block it after with guide coat.   Ended up wasting just about all of my filler on this damn door lol  
    • -10 is plenty for running to an oil cooler. When you look at oil feeds, like power steering feeds, they're much smaller, and then just a larger hose size to move volume in less pressure. No need for -12. Even on the race cars, like Duncans, and endurance cars, most of them are all running -10 and everything works perfectly fine, temps are under control, and there's no restrictions.
    • Update: O2 sensor in my downpipe turned out to be faulty when I plugged in to the Haltech software. Was getting a "open circuit" warning. Tons of carbon buildup on it, probably from when I was running rich for a while before getting it corrected. Replaced with new unit and test drove again. The shuffle still happens, albeit far less now. I am not able to replicate it as reliably and it no longer happens at the same RPM levels as before. The only time I was able to hear it was in 5th going uphill and another time in 5th where there was no noticeable incline but applying more throttle first sped it up and then cleared it. Then once in 4th when I slightly lifted the throttle going over a bump but cleared right after. My understanding is that with the O2 sensor out, the ECU relies entirely on the MAP tune and isn't able to make its small adjustments based on the sensors reading. All in all, a big improvement, though not the silver bullet. Will try validating the actuators are set up correctly, and potentially setting up shop time to tune the boost controller on closed loop rather than the open loop it is set to now. Think if it's set up on closed loop to take the O2 reading, that should deal with these last bits. Will try to update again as I go. 
    • More so GReddy oil relocation kits, sandwich plates, etc. all use 10AN fittings. And same, I've only used 10AN and my car sees track work (circuit, doing laps, not 10 sec squirt business).
×
×
  • Create New...