steve911
Enthusiast
Seeing the winter here was harsher than normal, and I got more bored than normal, and spent more on the family for Christmas than normal, I didn't have enough left over to buy a set of slotted rotors that I really wanted.
I found a brand new set of take off rotors for a song. I then layed out a pattern and stuck them onto my brothers CNC mill and VOILA a set of slotted rotors for less than $100.00 with OEM quality rotors to boot, no Chinese specials. The slots are .005 shallower than the minimum thickness of the rotor so when the slots are almost gone its time to change rotors. It took less than 2 1/2 hours to mill the slots in all 4 rotors on both sides.
I was really surprised at the precision the OE rotors were mfg'd to. when I clamped the rotor down I had less the one half thousandth of flatness deviation across the whole surface of the rotor, whether the hat was up or down.
I attached link to a pic of the left rear rotor. I used Eastwood's caliper paint and as you can see it matches rather well to the caliper.
Can't wait until the roads finally clear and the temps warm up to test them out.
I found a brand new set of take off rotors for a song. I then layed out a pattern and stuck them onto my brothers CNC mill and VOILA a set of slotted rotors for less than $100.00 with OEM quality rotors to boot, no Chinese specials. The slots are .005 shallower than the minimum thickness of the rotor so when the slots are almost gone its time to change rotors. It took less than 2 1/2 hours to mill the slots in all 4 rotors on both sides.
I was really surprised at the precision the OE rotors were mfg'd to. when I clamped the rotor down I had less the one half thousandth of flatness deviation across the whole surface of the rotor, whether the hat was up or down.
I attached link to a pic of the left rear rotor. I used Eastwood's caliper paint and as you can see it matches rather well to the caliper.
Can't wait until the roads finally clear and the temps warm up to test them out.