Be careful if your going down the machining road, especially on all German car's with soft disc's.
They will machine up ok & will last for alittle while, but where it was warped, they tend to also get hotspot's right through the material, which leads to the shudder coming back over time
If you just machine or replace the disc's, the pad's also develop hot spot's them & the result will be the same over time
My advice. Replace the pad's & disc's.
Last edited by maca; 14-09-2008 at 09:03 PM.
2002 Volkswagen Bora V5 - 2007 Mazda 3 GT - 1998 Ford Contour Sport - 2010 Volkswagen Jetta 2.0T - 2013 Volkswagen Passat 130TDI - 2015 Ford Escape 1.5 - 2016 Subaru WRX - 2018 Volkswagen Golf R Wolfsburg Wagon
Definately rotors then. I priced them from supercheap today, and it seems a bit steep to me! (and i'm not even sure what model rotors are for mk4 2L... there's a different listing for american 2L Vs. mk4 from 98-01... confusing much?
Either way, standard DBA rotors are about the $90 mark each, give or take $5; slotted are a joke at about $210 each, or x-drilled for $250! Prices for slotted or drilled seem a bit bloody steep to me!
Well mine are OEM..
Can't wait until the problem is fixed though, it'll be like a new car then.
got my discs and pads done:
Durid rear brake pads - $86.70
Zimmerman rear disc rotor - $121.00
$415.40 all up!
drives well.
A little off topic here, but can the R32 rotors etc be fitted to a standard Golf, or is it not worth the hassles?
Stage 2+ Intercooler Carbon Intake Downpipe Swaybar DV+ Remsa.
I don't think the extra braking would be worth the expense. You would be into a set of 16 inch wheels, if not 17s just to go over the discs. You'd have the cost of the discs, pads, brackets and possibly the calipers too.
I reckon the std 288mm brakes are adequate for the car in std form.
Gavin
I'm pretty sure the Audi TT brake rotors will fit without significant changes.
2000 Mk IV GTI
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