Vulcan Rider wrote:
SRockwood wrote:
Rotors should also be turned any time the pads are replaced to allow for proper bedding and reduce chances of noise.
Nope, sorry, I do NOT agree with that.
Turning rotors greatly decreases their life.
Many/most cars being built these days have rotors so thin that trying to turn them creates a safety hazard. Truck rotors might not be that thin......yet.
A couple of minutes with a piece of sand paper in hand is sufficient to break the glaze and help with "bedding".
I do a lot of brake work and I have to agree with SRockwood, assuming the thickness of the rotors remain within spec after cutting.
The perfect flat surface on the fresh-cut rotor provides full pad contact. If you don't cut the rotors, you will have a mismatch surface between pad & rotor. The argument is that the softer pad will conform to the steel rotor which is very true. The issue is that until then, during that break-in period you have limited contact which creates hot & cold rings on the rotor when braking. That uneven temperature across the rotor encourages warping which eventually translates into pulsating brakes. Also, during the long break-in period, your brakes will under-perform.
I would either cut the rotors or replace them. I do not recommend slapping new pads on an untouched used rotor unless your plan is to by time until doing it right & soon at a more opportune time. But then plan for new pads again because the ones you just installed will no longer be flat enough to mate to a fresh cut or new rotor.