Disc skimming?
Discussion
Anyone had this done - on the car?
https://skimmydiscs.co.uk/your-nearest-service-cen...
My offside discs got quite pitted (MOT was OK, but advisory, last year). I had both of the front discs and pads replaced this summer, as they were quite low anyway. However, the rear offside disc may be OK with just a skim.
I am especially interested in the on-car skimming.
Car is a 335d F30 with the larger discs, for information.
(I believe the cause of the rusty/pitted discs was low usage during CoVID and then got splattered with gritting salt last winter - street parking only - repeated heavy braking would not get rid).
https://skimmydiscs.co.uk/your-nearest-service-cen...
My offside discs got quite pitted (MOT was OK, but advisory, last year). I had both of the front discs and pads replaced this summer, as they were quite low anyway. However, the rear offside disc may be OK with just a skim.
I am especially interested in the on-car skimming.
Car is a 335d F30 with the larger discs, for information.
(I believe the cause of the rusty/pitted discs was low usage during CoVID and then got splattered with gritting salt last winter - street parking only - repeated heavy braking would not get rid).
Only once had discs skimmed, Renault 21 back in the day, new discs were expensive and i was broke so trying to save a few quid had them skimmed at an engineering shop...couple of months later one of them developed a crack so had to buy new discs anyway.
The only vehicles i would consider skimming would be on something like a Rover P6 (inboard rear discs, would the people you link to be able to skim those) or one of the few peculiar designs out there where discs are fitted from behind the hub...oddities like Matiz, some Transits and Hyundai Coupes had this design, where you have to remove the hub because the disc is fitted from inside the hub, ridiculous design which makes Hyundai Coupe disc renewal a seriously expensive job as when you separate the hub the bearing is often ruined and they are pressed in to boot.
For most normal design cars discs are so cheap (quality aftermarket just as good as OE) would skimming be worth it.
The only vehicles i would consider skimming would be on something like a Rover P6 (inboard rear discs, would the people you link to be able to skim those) or one of the few peculiar designs out there where discs are fitted from behind the hub...oddities like Matiz, some Transits and Hyundai Coupes had this design, where you have to remove the hub because the disc is fitted from inside the hub, ridiculous design which makes Hyundai Coupe disc renewal a seriously expensive job as when you separate the hub the bearing is often ruined and they are pressed in to boot.
For most normal design cars discs are so cheap (quality aftermarket just as good as OE) would skimming be worth it.
I tend to skim discs every time I change pads.
I have a decent home milling machine so its easy for me to skin discs and it costs me nothing
When I find it works well is if the brakes are squealing. Skimming the disc normally sorts it all out
Also it gets rid of that annoying lip which always forms on the outside of the disc and destroys new pads
I have a decent home milling machine so its easy for me to skin discs and it costs me nothing
When I find it works well is if the brakes are squealing. Skimming the disc normally sorts it all out
Also it gets rid of that annoying lip which always forms on the outside of the disc and destroys new pads
thebraketester said:
Pica-Pica said:
Thanks. My instinct is to replace the discs. Just asking, in case someone said skimming worked out well.
Replace them. I had some 2 piece ap racing discs reskimmed and whilst it fixed the issue initially, it did come back and ultimately it was a waste of money.
CraigyMc said:
thebraketester said:
Pica-Pica said:
Thanks. My instinct is to replace the discs. Just asking, in case someone said skimming worked out well.
Replace them. I had some 2 piece ap racing discs reskimmed and whilst it fixed the issue initially, it did come back and ultimately it was a waste of money.
thebraketester said:
CraigyMc said:
thebraketester said:
Pica-Pica said:
Thanks. My instinct is to replace the discs. Just asking, in case someone said skimming worked out well.
Replace them. I had some 2 piece ap racing discs reskimmed and whilst it fixed the issue initially, it did come back and ultimately it was a waste of money.
Gassing Station | Suspension, Brakes & Tyres | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff