Most likely the brake fluid will corrode and eat-away the seals on your Power Steering system.
Brake fluid has a mineral in it that the rubber seals of the PS system can't handle.
If you drive it long enough you'll either get severe leaks, or potentially the pump will seize.
Best advice is to drain the system, fill with proper PS fluid, run it, then drain again.
Get clear fluid if you can so you can tell when the brake fluid is out.
This will likely take a few bottles
No. Brake fluid is not a petroleum product. Power steering fluid is. Petroleum product will swell and ruin rubber part's brake system is full of rubber parts. You will destroy your brake system using power steering fluid.
No!
No !
no, but if you have a auto transmission you can you can use that for power steering
Your power steering will fail because brake fluid is poor lubricant.
Bad juju. Don't do it. If you've already done it, you'll probably have to have the power steering system flushed; brake fluid has significantly different characteristics from power steering fluid. Agree with above. It's pretty caustic, flush and get it out of there before you have problems.
Any fluid other than brake fluid will ruin the master cylinder, abs unit, brake hoses, and calipers.
NO !! POWER STEERING FLUID IS SIMILAR TO TRANSMISSION FLUID... BRAKE FUILD IS LIKE NOTHING ELSE
NO ! ( My Ford Explorer uses automatic transmission fluid as the power steering fluid )
facing engine (bonnet up) on right hand side near shock tower is BLACK reservoir with sensor wire in center of cap - this is power steering(white capped reservoir = brake )do not put brake fluid in power-steering or power-steering fluid in brake res. use power-steering fluid or auto trans fluid to top up
Both the power steering pump and the brake booster operate hydraulically. Putting brake fluid in the power steering pump will not harm it since brake fluid is a light oil only with different properties. I would only worry if it were the other way around and you put power steering fluid in the brake master cylinder. Power steering fluid doesn't have the heat range or density of brake fluid.
no, brake fluid is not the same as power steering fluid, make sure you actually get the right stuff. and double check what type of brake fluid you have (dot 3/ dot 5) because there is a difference there too