tomalophicon
Well-known member
I havnt measured a rotor for 40 years, a guy can look at them and see if they are fit for service, same for pads.
You measure them with your eyes? That's a gift.
I havnt measured a rotor for 40 years, a guy can look at them and see if they are fit for service, same for pads.
You measure them with your eyes? That's a gift.
No but can look at a common rotor and asses if its work out junk and needs a new one. Had one in the other day, the passenger got jammed with gravel and ruined it, just wore it right off. Could measure the difference between right and left with a construction tape.
How are you measuring undamaged rotors for spec though? I want to learn your skills!
Who turns rotors anymore?

I'd skip digital:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00NI1N3S4/?tag=atomicindus08-20
Or if you want to get fancy:
https://www.misterworker.com/en-us/facom/disc-brake-vernier-caliper-df18-01/6424.html
Sberry lives in the salt belt. Rotors don't last long enough to make it to minimum thickness.
Euros are almost universally one and done, since the rotors are so soft. I can't imagine anyone taking the time to cut 20thou of dish off each side before you can take a proper pass.
Domestic/asian car rotors get rust damaged pretty quick, VERY rare a rotor can make it through 2 sets of pads without de-laminating/chipping/rusting over.
At then end of the day, is management or yourself going to refuse a gravy brake job because the rotors are below discard? Unless the rotor is visibly below spec (grinding brakes) or the fins are gone, would you or management refuse the pad slap? A proper brake job means cutting or replacing rotors. Most of the time rotors are comparable in price, and they're WAY faster to just swap out. Unless it's a super pricey rotor, I'd rather just swap them and move onto something else then babysit our low-powered lathe. But if a cheap-o wants a pad slap, and cheap-o customer DGAF about thickness on a rotor, who am I to deny? It's a half *** job anyway, so who cares how thick the rotor is? I guess I'm saying poor people (and cheapies) need brakes too, and unless they're blatantly falling apart it'll be fine.

I havnt measured a rotor for 40 years, a guy can look at them and see if they are fit for service, same for pads.
What ever you buy, make sure they aren't parallel flat jaws. They need tips on the end to reach past any lip worn in on the rotor. But usually if there's a lip the rotors is pretty much shot at that point.
I used a Fowler that I got at Autozone but it got smashed when I loaned it to a friend. Not sure why I do that...
https://www.autozone.com/clamps-and...h-rotocal-with-twin-conical-anvils/186492_0_0
V/R
Bogie
Out of curiosity why skip digital? I find even cheap digital to be accurate enough for the job described and batteries are plentiful and cheap.
I havnt measured a rotor for 40 years, a guy can look at them and see if they are fit for service, same for pads.
I'd just get a cheap HF pair and grind some material off to clear any lip worn into the disc. Down and dirty - it ain't rocket science.
The following is more than enough.
https://www.harborfreight.com/6-in-long-reach-digital-caliper-63714.html
While it's understandable to spend big bucks on a tool for critical applications, spending $600 for measuring a rusty/dusty rotor (often cheap to buy new) is a total waste.
I use this to measure rotor thickness. It's more than 10 years old from Harbor Freight. Find two flat objects, stack them together and measure with the caliper, hit "zero" button, then place the objects on each side of the rotor, the read out is the rotor thickness. I use coins, but for a professional, two megnets might be better.![]()
I'd just get a cheap HF pair and grind some material off to clear any lip worn into the disc. Down and dirty - it ain't rocket science.