The act of vehicle braking is a composite brake pad/shoe being forcefully pushed, against a steel disc/drum with considerable opposing force .rest assured, those larger spots are indentations in the coating--coating that has chunked off, so to speak. It ain't paint or anything else that's in globs stuck there. Since I went back to bed them in exactly as Raybestos recommended I can see most other areas of the rotor coating that are now slightly wearing in a nice even way. As you would expect. Kind of raises the question as to what happens when the coating is entirely worn off....what was the point of having it on there to begin with.
Anyway, it makes complete sense to me that some fault in the underlying iron caused a problem with the coating adhering. OR that the coating itself is defective. Either way i'm not messing with totally coated rotors again.
Hard to imagine Annie coating holding up in that situation or any period of time at all.
It’s almost seems like a marketing gimmick, and a bit ironic since most goals when doing brake are to have the braking surfaces as clean as possible. Now there’s a bunch of contamination of whatever the coating
I am with you to pass on it next time.


