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Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Delphos OH
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Driven97 View Post
Just as an FYI, it's fantastically rare for rotors to actually warp. 99.9% of the time pedal pulsing is caused by uneven pad transfer. During braking, some of the pad material embeds itself into the surface of the rotor. This is totally normal and actually desired.

If you like to sit at stop lights with your brakes clamped hard, especially if the brakes are on the hot side, a little extra pad material can sort of stick when you release. Do this often enough, and you can build nice little clusters of pad material. To make things worse, the brakes are "sticky" in these spots which increases the odds of stopping on one next time, making those individual spots build little peaks of pad material n the rotors higher and higher with each stop.

Best solution to avoid this is to not stand on the brakes anymore once you've stopped. Ease off on the pedal, use only enough pressure as needed. Even better is to roll ahead very slightly periodically to avoid being clamped on to the same spot.

I agree with the above - a light cut might help you temporarily, but it's best to just go with replacement and change your braking habits. This part I'm not as clear on, but I guess the uneven heating you've created can change the metallurgy in the rotor unevenly, and that means your problem will come back.

Good luck!
That was my understanding as well. My brother and I had a long conversation about the what and why of "warping" and his point was the same as yours. The only thing I can figure is someone was a bit hard on the brakes before I bought the car. I downshift to slow down and I'm not hard on the brake at stop lights. I'm going to see if I can get them turned and if not I guess I'll be paying the Porsche tax

Thanks for your input
Old 08-21-2017, 08:00 AM
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