Remember the Doctor in Cannonball Run (Jack Elam), do you have his eyes?
Just trying to build a pic here.

It is most certainly possible to alter the metallurgical structure (and therefore shape) of metal using heat. brake discs are well capable of heating up enough to do this during hard braking and potentially rapid cooling (if there's any water around) will make it worse. Brake discs are made with this in mind but only to a certain level. Very hard use, such as on a track, is very likely to put them in a situation for which they have not been designed and so may cause them to do unexpected things..rAudiguy wrote:LOL... it's interesting I must admit years ago on a mk2 golf GTI I had to change the discs and they were warped so badly the whole car shook..... after i changed them it was fine under breaking and normal driving. I guess under intense heat etc metal does change shape does it not?? I'm not saying I don't believe your point of view just not totally conviened that it is sceintifically impossible for discs to warp.
Nah, no glasses, here's a photo of me!!t_urbo wrote:Rs4v8
Remember the Doctor in Cannonball Run (Jack Elam), do you have his eyes?
Just trying to build a pic here.
Paul, that is quite steep in all honesty but whats done is done. If I remember correctly, DSGwagen were doing the front discs for approx. £280 (inc VAT) and front pads for approx £180 (inc VAT). I know I paid approx £850 but that was for a set of front discs, front AND rear pads.W8PMC wrote:I got nowhere near the price a couple of you mentioned. The retail price for just the discs was £285.10 each plus VAT, then £207.73 plus VAT for the pads.
Total bill at retail money including fitting, VAT plus a brake fluid change (made sense to get the fluid done given pads & discs were being replaced), was £1095.35. I did manage to get a dealer credit of £500 so i paid just shy of £600. Still, without the credit i was looking at £1100 for the entire job.
Car feels much better now on the brakes & the discs were in fact slightly warped, scored on the back & generally uneven which the Master Tech rightly said was heat related.
Glad it's all sorted, but i'd love to know how a price of under £700 is possible for front pads & discs, given just the discs are over £600 without VAT & no fitting??
Ugly fecker ain't yars4v8 wrote:Nah, no glasses, here's a photo of me!!t_urbo wrote:Rs4v8
Remember the Doctor in Cannonball Run (Jack Elam), do you have his eyes?
Just trying to build a pic here.
what flavour did you want???right, any pictures anyone??
If the discs are mounted properly they will not warp, so with regard to this thread the said vehicle was new so its safe to say they were mounted properly.rAudiguy wrote:LOL... it's interesting I must admit years ago on a mk2 golf GTI I had to change the discs and they were warped so badly the whole car shook..... after i changed them it was fine under breaking and normal driving. I guess under intense heat etc metal does change shape does it not?? I'm not saying I don't believe your point of view just not totally conviened that it is sceintifically impossible for discs to warp.
Yeah right, you pulled that photo out your wallet....rs4v8 wrote:Nah, no glasses, here's a photo of me!!t_urbo wrote:Rs4v8
Remember the Doctor in Cannonball Run (Jack Elam), do you have his eyes?
Just trying to build a pic here.
Your tv refresh rate is 50hz and you can't even see that, not sure how your leg would feel 100hzt_urbo wrote:If the discs are mounted properly they will not warp, so with regard to this thread the said vehicle was new so its safe to say they were mounted properly.rAudiguy wrote:LOL... it's interesting I must admit years ago on a mk2 golf GTI I had to change the discs and they were warped so badly the whole car shook..... after i changed them it was fine under breaking and normal driving. I guess under intense heat etc metal does change shape does it not?? I'm not saying I don't believe your point of view just not totally conviened that it is sceintifically impossible for discs to warp.
It only takes a 0-1mm difference in surface thickness to be felt through the brake pedal, so im amazed how the Human eye can see such a small difference in tolerance.
I pulled this from another site, but it has to be said any decent racing team/company will say the same, however you will find dopey dealers, brake distributers,parts companies and some mechanics use the term warped on a regular basis.![]()
The overwhelming cause of brake judder is a condition called Disc Thickness Variation – period! In other words the disc develops a lack of parallelism between its inboard and outboard friction surfaces. I say, “develops” because even discs that are
machined to the very tightest tolerances during production can easily develop Disc Thickness Variation (hereafter referred to as: DTV) due to incorrect fitment or driver abuse.
When the brake pads are pressed up against a disc that has developed DTV they will pass over a series of thinner and thicker areas on the braking surface of the disc in rapid succession. Considering that the brake pads are being pushed together with substantial force they will be forced down into the ‘cavities’ or thinner areas only to be kicked back violently when reaching the bumps or ‘thicker’ areas. The frequency of this
‘bouncing’ action is typically over 100 Hertz when braking from highway speeds of around 130kph. This results in pulses that are transmitted through the caliper pistons, via the brake fluid to the driver, who experiences them as brake judder..
The retail price for just the discs was £285.10 each plus VAT, then £207.73 plus VAT for the pads.
No picture as i don't often take my camera to the dealers when i'm having work done.t_urbo wrote:Glad you got a decent price, would love to see a pic of your 'WARPED' disc.W8PMC wrote:I got nowhere near the price a couple of you mentioned. The retail price for just the discs was £285.10 each plus VAT, then £207.73 plus VAT for the pads.
Total bill at retail money including fitting, VAT plus a brake fluid change (made sense to get the fluid done given pads & discs were being replaced), was £1095.35. I did manage to get a dealer credit of £500 so i paid just shy of £600. Still, without the credit i was looking at £1100 for the entire job.
Car feels much better now on the brakes & the discs were in fact slightly warped, scored on the back & generally uneven which the Master Tech rightly said was heat related.
Glad it's all sorted, but i'd love to know how a price of under £700 is possible for front pads & discs, given just the discs are over £600 without VAT & no fitting??
Is that what Audi 'mechanic's' call themselves these days, Master Tech'.
I wonder if a Master Tech would have the ability to strip and rebuild an engine?
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