Hi Larry , assuming that question is to me , I have never drained a silicone fill to exchange it . why ? have had no problems either .I was fortunate to find gallon cans of it 30 years ago as mil surplus still living off that .Related to that 30 years — Another aspect of glycol not mentioned is a can of it on shelf goes to hell once opened .. Silicone does not . In fact dissolved air micro bubbles dissipates , easier bleeding . Unlike another post here , i think it takes 6 months to fully deaerate .a can that is shaken . Complaints of spongy pedal can line up here …You may be pouring water in by topping up from an opened can of glycolwater gets into glycol at master storage surface , it slowly soaks it in by design , after many years it is all through the brake system , until it can hold no more , so it is everywhere in the glycol but not as free water . It is still working ok . Boiling point does drop , obviously . But I think a non issue with drum brakes , huge issue with discs .Why old style glycol was fine , back to 30’s wheel cylinders are thermally removed from brake shoe compared to disc pads .Saturation point or water holding ability is usually temp dependent .so on a cold day it may come out as liquid water if saturated and you had not exchanged it , now you have stratified water and glycol , water sinks to bottom ends up in lower wheel cylinder , rust starts . I have seen this rust pit so often any denial it happens is pointless .It gets in over many years at surface of pool in master cylinder as air pressure rises and falls, bringing in humidity . And the pit may be there already even if cleaned and converted .Silicone simply does not do that . it drives off water , used for example in modern high voltage insulators on poles , anti hygroscopic design , it beads up water , probably in rain x too ! ( silicone rubber but same deal ) .So unlike glycol it will not carry water in solution to wheel cylinders . But if there was any water in system or saturated gycol left inside lines it would probably sink to bottom under your new silicone ( i am not sure of SG of each) and make it to wheel cylinders due to motion of fluid in lines .above paragraph is conjecture on my part ,if junk left behind , but total resistance to any significant water mixed into silicone is not conjecture . Does not happen.Perhaps conversion is slightly risky to some degree unless all new rubber parts and blowing out metal lines — or all new .Generally i do all new with cupro nickel as often it involves dual master . . If a conversion l would change fluid to be sure not contaminated by old stuff — after a year or two . Or stay with glycol and drain for sure every three years , as MB directs .I have never converted old stuff , to best of my recall , without all new rubber and wheel cylinder seals / inspection , or all new parts .Ultimately up to you , on all this . But hopefully we understand it , not opinionjgJohn do you flush dot5 often or has that been in there for twenty years?--
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