- Jul 17, 2006
- 3,990
- 6
- 81
Seems cheap. Rotors on my car are 33 a piece (cheapest).
Is it best to just get it replaced?
Out of curiosity, why are you looking at getting this done?
Are they warped or out of spec?
As long I'm not having brake pulsation and thickness is good, I just throw pads on twice and call it a day. The pad quickly bed into any irregularities.
New pads.
I'm also planning to do the drums anyway. The rear shoes have never been replaced. The car has about 142K.
What kinda car?
Yeah, I would not trust some JiffyLube type monkey to do precision machining which is what "turning" a rotor is. I'd buy new ones or if you really want to keep them, take them to a machine shop.
You wouldn't trust a JiffyLube monkey to plane a head, why let them touch the part which stops your car?
Turning a rotor isn't rocket science. Even if they do manage to fuck it up it's not as though your car is going to explode and kill you the next time you press on the brake pedal.
Turning a rotor isn't rocket science. Even if they do manage to fuck it up it's not as though your car is going to explode and kill you the next time you press on the brake pedal.
You know if they don't look at the min thickness and they continue to cut at it. You might put the rotor on, it might shatter during braking??? Could potentially be dangerous....
Where do you get the rotors turned on your Pontiac Aztek?
You should do that before you even consider turning your rotors and definitely do it after.
I drove a car once with brakes so bad the rotors were worn down to the fins and cracked in many places. They still managed to stop the car. It was a rental car and the customer had driven it for thousands of miles with pads that were worn down to the plates so the plates were cutting into the rotors.
I've never turned the rotors on the Aztek. Anyway, I sold the Aztek to my mechanic recently and paid cash for a black Chrysler 300. It goes with my black hat and dark sunglasses.![]()
Less likely to cause an actual accident or such but doing something twice blows, most guys don't have a mag mount dial gauge to check runout on car before reassembly, which is the proper way. There are some multi-piston caliper setups that out of true rotors will cause a loss of braking ability via a pumping effect but that's fairly rare and eccentric.
You don't see them so often anymore but there used to be on-car brake lathes that worked really well. All in all unless I've got a lathe on hand, I just replace the damn things. Time is money and all that.

Yeah that was after you made that bad turn to avoid taking your DEA brother-in-law to your place of employment.....
