DOT 5? ONLY Acceptable IF you have a Harley? or other system designed to use it as base fluid!
BMW Systems are designed around Ethylene Glycol based brake fluid and on two that I know of the hoses and seals swelled after about 3 months requiring a total rebuild of braking systems
personally I only use DOT 5 but that's another story!
The DOT number System is in reference to the Boiling point of the liquid
Another thing worth remembering is that the base of DOT 3, 4 and 5.1 is ethylene glycol
Does that name seem familiar? It should its the common base for Anti Freeze and if you think about it for a moment it is why water is absorbed into it! It is totally miscible ***
DOT5 If I remember was required to be coloured "Purple" to prevent it being in the same system as the Ethlene Glycol base fluids as they cannot mix
Very Importantly with the silicone base, it is totally immiscible with water so that drop of water that has got into the system (condensation on cap lid etc it is possible) will go where ???
It can't mix so where does it go? Well that's easy too, water is heavier so heads to the lowest point i.e. the calliper and once the fluid temperature passes 100 degrees ( I know it will be higher under pressure "but") Poof it becomes a big steam bubble in your previously totally fluid hydraulic system
*** to finish off this is why we change the brake and clutch fluid every two years (One year on wheel circuits on Servo brakes)
water absorption into the ethylene glycol effectively lowers the boiling point of the brake fluid AND also changes the PH slightly hence why very old brake fluid is often dark brown from eating pipe liners and seals!
R1150RT with Servo Brakes 65,000 miles 8 years old No record of Brake fluid changes
What I am saying is
Don't Piss about with your Brakes! Its a fiver for a bottle of fluid Change it (and Clutch fluid) bi-annually! Annually for wheel circuits on Servo ABS bikes (If there are any left with Servos??)
Oh and Don't use DOT 5 in Non Silicone base systems! It WILL fuck it up later on