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Old January 16th 10, 04:00 PM posted to rec.bicycles.tech
Peter Cole[_2_]
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Posts: 4,572
Default Disc Rotor Refurb?

DougC wrote:
On 1/15/2010 4:27 PM, (PeteCresswell) wrote:
A new 6" rotor is only about twenty bucks, but I've accumulated a
few rotors that *look* ok, but pulse badly.

Tried boiling in water for awhile on the latest one, but no
change.

I thought sand blasting for a moment, and then it seemed like
that would be asking for irregularities in thickness.

Anybody got a tried-and-true method of refurbishing a rotor that
doesn't require a machine shop?


For $50 each plus shipping, I can make them work like new.

--------

Seriously, it would be interesting to see exactly what the problem is.

To make sure they're not warped, you would need....... a machine shop.

You coat one side with dye (or just draw a grid on it with a permanent
marker) and then scoot it around gently on a granite flat, and any
"high" spots will have the marking ink rubbed off before everywhere else.
~


The classic way to get a cheap flat surface (i.e. for lapping) is to use
some plate glass. I've checked auto heads/blocks for flatness with a
ground (e.g. Starrett) straightedge (~$10).
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