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What to do with used brake rotors ???

Mike14k

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 4, 2010
Messages
268
Location
Very rural Oklahoma
Gents,

I searched around and never saw this topic....

So you can see by my avitar I have a fair amount of vehicles I work on and maintain including brakes.

In my storage area, I've got a stack of all sizes of used brake rotors around 4-5 feet high, and sure would like to find a use for them. I somehow think there should be some application I could find.

Anyone have suggestions on what to weld up, build or make out of them ??? Grinder stands ??? short jackstands ??? stepping stones in the garden ???

I can't be the only guy around with a stack of rotors like this. Or do you just toss them ????

Mike14k
 
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danieldd

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Joined
Dec 10, 2010
Messages
1,005
Location
Southern Tennesseee
I've got a stack as well, although not as large as yours. I've threatened for the past couple of years to take them to the scrap yard (not the land fill), but I haven't done it so far. I don't have a welder, if I did, I'd probably do something with them...
 

GRN96WS6

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Joined
Dec 23, 2012
Messages
2,202
Location
SOMD
I take em to the dump and toss them in the scrap metal bin which I assume gets recycled.
 

Gary S

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Joined
Dec 27, 2008
Messages
2,972
Location
Bismarck, ND
Scrap them. I've never had to replace a brake rotor in 45 years of driving, but as soon as I buy a vehicle, I junk the metallic pads and replace them with organic pads. After that, the rotors will easily outlast the vehicle without ever having to be replaced.
If you choose to run the damaging pads, then be prepared to junk a lot of rotors.
 

Fastbird

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 28, 2007
Messages
694
Location
Fort Wayne, IN
Scrap them. Round here right now it's $14 per 100lbs. Metal collectors come by the shop and offer a buck a rotor, so you KNOW they're worth at least $1 each in scrap.
 

Spam16v

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 31, 2010
Messages
368
Location
B-low NY
I take them to the curb, last about 2 minutes... I'm obviously lazy, and don't handle enough to justify the trip for scrap.
 
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BigGMC

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Joined
Jun 6, 2012
Messages
278
Location
Land of Confusion - NY
Couldn't make a decent stand with just one - not heavy enough..... but put four of 'em down in a square shape with "hats" up, then set the 5th one on top of all four and weld 'em up. Bet that would be stable enough.
I was always gonna snag a big truck brake drum from work to make a grinder stand.
Or, make a garage windchime!!!... well that might be a bit :supergay: :D
 

BlackLead

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 18, 2006
Messages
415
Location
Biloxi, MS
My wife tosses them in the forge and pounds them into something else.

That would be awesome. I wish someone near me had such a forge; I'd give them all my scrap and ask them to make me a machete or something. I don't think you can ever have too many edged items.
 

ryan t

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 12, 2012
Messages
177
Location
Bristol, Va.
Make an axe:

010512-jeremy-renner-knifeax.jpg
 

SuitorsGarage

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 18, 2011
Messages
222
Location
New Hampshire
I usually like to trip over them for a while in the garage. Then I move them around in the shop from place to place thinking they are out of the way. Then I move them outside until I donate them to my buddy's scrap pile.

Seriously though they are good scrap. I have a scrapper that comes to my shop for scrap but I feel obligated to send the good stuff like rotors up to my buddy's shop. He waits until he has a huge amount of good stuff and cashes in. Me, I just want it out of my way.
 

admranger

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 16, 2012
Messages
482
Location
Las Vegas, NV
Make clocks out of them?

I either toss mine in the recycle bin unless I have a bunch of them at once; then I take them to the recycler since it is near where I work.
 

WQ59B

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 18, 2010
Messages
762
Location
NJ
Depending on the dimensions involved, the vented front rotors can work as a tubing 'die', IE: clamp it in a vise and use the recessed channel around the edge where the vents are to make a uniform sweeping radius in brake, fuel or other lines. When the line fits snugly in the recess, it keeps the line from kinking. Limited use, yes.
 

Tucko

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Joined
Jul 28, 2012
Messages
1,650
Location
Whittier, Ca
Gents,

I searched around and never saw this topic....

So you can see by my avitar I have a fair amount of vehicles I work on and maintain including brakes.

In my storage area, I've got a stack of all sizes of used brake rotors around 4-5 feet high, and sure would like to find a use for them. I somehow think there should be some application I could find.

Anyone have suggestions on what to weld up, build or make out of them ??? Grinder stands ??? short jackstands ??? stepping stones in the garden ???

I can't be the only guy around with a stack of rotors like this. Or do you just toss them ????

Mike14k


I've been thinking the same thing, but I've only got 2 rotors....
 

SGKent

Banned
Joined
Feb 12, 2010
Messages
1,959
Location
Citrus Heights CA
thank the Lord I never collected mine and tossed them into the scrap as they came in. Think of the hours saved not having to debate what to do with them. I need to count my blessings more :)
 

Lotek

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 9, 2007
Messages
9,098
Location
Los Angeles, Ca.
Scrap them. I've never had to replace a brake rotor in 45 years of driving, but as soon as I buy a vehicle, I junk the metallic pads and replace them with organic pads. After that, the rotors will easily outlast the vehicle without ever having to be replaced.
If you choose to run the damaging pads, then be prepared to junk a lot of rotors.

??? I want the best possible performance out of my brakes, degrading the performance to preserve the rotors doesn't make any sense at all.:dunno: Do you run steel tires as well? I hear they last much longer than those newfangled pneumatic tires.:lol_hitti
 

ndnchf

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 9, 2012
Messages
1,556
Location
Fredericksburg, Virginia
Mount a vise to it and use it on the welding table. This one's not mine, but I plan to make one like it. It has enough weight to hold things while welding, yet is easy to move around.
 

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