....and how often should I change the CanBus fluid?
As often as you have a warranty job done on the bike

....and how often should I change the CanBus fluid?

So you get the dealer to do it?
I just don't fancy my ABS unit and calipers internally corroding due to the moisture absorbed by the fluid and it's so cheap and easy to do (on a non-servo bike anyway) that it's a no-brainer.
But each to their own![]()
Categorically or maybe dogegorically, in my previous bike an 1100RT, & current bike a servo 1200RT,( Lots of miles), I have never changed or had the brake fluid changed, and will not do so unless the system is dismantled for some other purpose. No moisture can enter the system on a motorcycle (unlike a car) because the reservoirs have a diaphragm seal on the top of the fluid reservoir, to stop the fluid spilling in the event of dropping the bike, but it also serves to prevent moisture contiaminating the brake fluid.
Myke
Apart from the 600 mile service I have done all the maintenance myself.

Good for you.
I'm aware of diaphragm seals in m/c reservoirs. However brake fluid does break down for other reasons apart from moisture contamination (heat, pressure, age etc). It's so simple and cheap to do it's a bit of a no-brainer especially for something as safety critical as brakes.
But it is of course, your decision![]()
For the 20 minutes it takes we've spent longer arguing about it than it would have taken to change it.
AS you hardly use the back brake at all..I simply drain front and back in order to swop the brake fluids over...sortedLikewise my 20/50 from the 1100 is well thrashed so that then goes into my airhead and then a couple of years later into my Land Rover. Win Win Win
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Mines a 97 1100 with ABS, not sure if it has a servo or not to be honest but I suspect it does.
Sorry, but I'm not arguing. I just don't change brake fluid unless system is dismantled for something else. A waste of time, money & effort designed by brake fluid manufacturers to sell more brake fluid.
Next time I "boil" the brake fluid on a roadgoing motorcycle, I will change fluid. In 1/4 of a million miles on bikes I have never done so. Have boiled new Dot 4 in rally cars within 5 miles though.
In a roadgoing car I have only boiled the fluid once in my life, with 6 in a Volvo 360 coming into Bets-y-Cwoed when late for a car ferry. Slowed down a little & problem disappeared.
Myke

If the fluid had been changed it would not have boiled at all. As I used to say to customers at my garage there are people who have played Russian roulette and survived-that does not mean it's a good idea! The boiled once incident could have been your last experience on this planet. Conventional brake fluid (as apposed to the mineral fluid used for years by Citroen) does deteriorate with age, we used a tester in my garage on all vehicles and advised brake fluid changes as required. Our tester was itself tested every six months as part of our ISO 9002 programme. My first experience of a failure was loosing the brake (only had one) on a racing kart in 1971. The experienced guys told me later they changed fluid after every meeting. As for bike systems being sealed-there is no such thing-the fuid will absorb water. This water will lower the boiling point as well as causing corrosion in master cylinder and calipers not to mention expensive ABS units.
I have recently change the fluid on my 1150-ABS and servos- fitting stainless pipes at the same time, the whole operation took two and a half hours!
John

I did read what you wrote, no mention of the age of the car. In any case a car that is "six months old" may actually have been assembled some considerable time before that. Unless the fluid was tested there is no way of knowing it's condition.Note what I wrote:
Have boiled new Dot 4 in rally cars within 5 miles though.
In a road going car I have only boiled the fluid once in my life, with 6 in a Volvo 360 coming into Bets-y-Cowed when late for a car ferry. Slowed down a little & problem disappeared.
The road car was 6 months old, & you will see the rally car brake fluid was less than a week old.
Anyway, boiling fluid just leaves the brakes a little spongy any you maybe have to pump the pedal 3 or 4 times to get a brake. The fun thing is then that, if you left foot brake, as I always did when rallying, you keep the brake pedal depressed slightly to stop the brakes disappearing in between corners. On the rally car, I have photos of all 4 disks glowing cherry red at a checkpoint. This may have had something to do with the boiling.
ISO 9000 implantation is a means of producing a provable paper trail.
As someone involved in manufacturing, I, and most of my colleagues believe it is a means of producing a repeatable product. If the product is rubbish, it will be consistently rubbish. It does not actually improve the product. Only company ethos does that.
Myke
If the fluid had been changed it would not have boiled at all. As I used to say to customers at my garage there are people who have played Russian roulette and survived-that does not mean it's a good idea! The boiled once incident could have been your last experience on this planet. Conventional brake fluid (as apposed to the mineral fluid used for years by Citroen) does deteriorate with age, we used a tester in my garage on all vehicles and advised brake fluid changes as required. Our tester was itself tested every six months as part of our ISO 9002 programme. My first experience of a failure was loosing the brake (only had one) on a racing kart in 1971. The experienced guys told me later they changed fluid after every meeting. As for bike systems being sealed-there is no such thing-the fuid will absorb water. This water will lower the boiling point as well as causing corrosion in master cylinder and calipers not to mention expensive ABS units.
I have recently change the fluid on my 1150-ABS and servos- fitting stainless pipes at the same time, the whole operation took two and a half hours!
John

..What a load of complete and utter BOLLOX
It's like the Wash rinse and repeat idea that shampoo companies use..
Revenue earner...
Apart from the green Citroen LHM fluid, which imho all companies should use..
[ off topic but only other Vehicle manufacturer allowed by license to use Citroen LHM fluid was Rolls Royce/ Bentley for their self leveling system..]
Thank you for your considered opinen-it just happens to differ from that of most experts-just try Google and check it out.
I worked on Citroen cars for 35 years and totally agree that all cars should use LHM fluid. Too much money to be made replacing callipers,wheelcylinders etc that fail due to the use of conventional fluid (especially when the fluid is not replaced as required)
John
And there were also some Maserati models that used LHM fluid-Citroen owned Maserati for a time and a Maserati engine was used in the Citroen SM



with engine in situ.. also remember a cam chain tensioner mod that helped
thats when I realised just how useful MIG welders were I take it sir is referring to the most Beautiful car in the world, the SM
.
You're not wrong
i always had / have a soft spot for the DS too.




but up yours 
I take it sir is referring to the most Beautiful car in the world, the SM
The one main fault with those was the untensioned main crank to jackshaft chaindriving the OHC's via the jackshaft..... which drove all the other auxilaries aircon and hydraulics ect
The cam chains were tensioned off the jack shaft,
The other auxilaries which by there nature cut in with a bang [ hydraulics /aircon] caused extreme shock on the main chain causing many failures.... 64 hour labour charge to fix+ mega parts bill
Unless you were crafty and cut a panel out of firewall and did them from the passenger cabinwith engine in situ.. also remember a cam chain tensioner mod that helped
thats when I realised just how useful MIG welders were
when replacing cut out panel...