Yes, good policy, if you can purge all the old brake fluid out, as @Turboman has said you cannot mix the fluids as traces of the old will still work their destructive ways. I used a special system cleaner, (that was about 20 years ago, can't recall what it was), that was made to take all traces of the old type fluid out, then all the system rubbers/seals need to be changed out.Looking at the brake pipes, it’s not long before they will need replacing. I may do this when the whole lot needs sorting.
It makes sense as an upgrade while I’m at it.
It's like a lot of this stuff, there is pro's and con's, if I had another car worthwhile keeping a long time I'd do the brake fluid thing and the waterless coolant thing because it keeps them usable for longer and narrows the risks of stuffing them up completely, say, should a coolant hose burst or a brake fail.Everything. The stuff can't come into contact with normal brake fluid at all.
May be worth doing on a high value vehicle, on an old series it is probably easier to change the cheap fluid every year.
Started doing the vaselene thing when I was trialing a series 3 [ still in use as farm run around ] It would be out once a month and usualy come back plasterd in crud,a quick power wash then not used until the next month. Once a year I would retreat the brakes and find perhaps only one or two pistons had stuck despite the inevitable mess in the drums.
Yea, I remember that Turboman.
Did one this morning. The top was the pritpart alloy and the bottom a steel. They were both leaking and the steel one had started rusting inside. Just gave them a titivate, new rubbers and threw the wheel back on. Looks like I may be doing the whole system sooner than later. I aint replacing cylinders every two years thats for sure.