Originally posted by: Pacfanweb
Originally posted by: flamingelephant
if you put on new pads, resurfacing the rotors will increase performance and how long they last,
Machining rotors will do nothing of the sort. Only reason to machine is if the rotors are either really grooved, or warped.
The fact of the matter is, new pads will stop you better initially if you DON'T turn the rotors.
If you've done thousands of brake jobs and test-driven the cars afterward, you'd know this.
It takes awhile for the pads to seat to freshly-turned rotors, and they don't stop worth a crap at first. They're really sort of dangerous.
A good way to break the pads in quickly is to simply ride around the block with your foot lightly on the brake. You don't want to scald them, but you want to smell the brakes a little when you get back.
Let it cool, and it'll stop like a champ. Works for either a pad-slap or if you machine the rotors.