I bad side effect with using DOT 5 is silcone based and it repels the water and the water collects in the lowest part of the brake system and that is the wheel cylinders !! My opinion is DOT 3 is a better choice not only for the lower cost but it absorbs the water and does not cause as much corrision inside your wheel cylinders and brake system like DOT 5 does . I do not think I would flush the brake system with alchohl because it will dry out the neopreme / rubber parts and cause them to fail long term . I would justflush with DOT 3 and refill with DOT 3. Good Luck .
That can be risky as a clot can get lodged in a nook or cranny and work loose later on. Sometimes the clots also just plug the entrance to a wheel cylinder, negating that cylinder from operating properly.
On motorcycles, sometimes an owner makes the same mistake, and tops off their DOT 5 system with DOT 3. SOP in that situation is an all-new everything: master cylinder, brake lines and calipers. And every component of those systems is staring you right in the face! You would think they are easy to flush. But no. The reason is that no shop wants the liability if the bike does not stop some day and the rider goes down. Brake fluid screw-ups can be expensive, indeed.
Also, never shake DOT 5 because it air entrains microscopic bubbles that can make it difficult or impossible to bleed. This is usually more of a problem with smaller systems, like on motorcycles. The usual way of eliminating the bubbles (if you pour in bubbly fluid) is to let the system sit overnight. You can't see these bubles, but they are there. I have watched bike mechanics running through quarts of DOT5 on a system that holds a half pint, wondering why they cannot bleed the system.