If you mean, is it glycol-based or silicone-based, I suppose you could
remove a sample, place it in a glass container, and drip some water into it.
If it is absorbed (if it mixes in when you stir it), it is glycol. If it
does the oil-and-water thing and refuses to mix, it is silicone.
Be aware I am proposing this out of my knowledge of chemical principles -- I
have never tried it with an actual sample.
I can't think of any way of distinguishing between DOT 3 and DOT 4 glycol
fluid, but it wouldn't really matter, if you just flushed and refilled.
on 10/25/12 2:57 PM, Tom Gunderson at thgun@comporium.net wrote:
> I have a 1957 MGA 1500 rst. I do not know what type of brake fluid that in in
> my car. How can I check it?
> Tom Gunderson
--
Max Heim
'66 MGB GHN3L76149
If you're near Menlo Park, CA,
it's the primer red one with chrome wires
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