> 1998 S70 T5 with 60,000 miles
>
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
>
> Thanks for any answers.
I don't think the rear rotors have a lot of extra material even when
they are brand new. My Haynes manual says 9.6mm thick new, 8.4mm
minimum. That is 1.2mm or .047" difference. If they are half worn
out already and you take off .005" (arbitrary number for the sake of
argument) on each side, how much wear is left? Since new rear rotors
are easily found for less than $50 each, the question is whether it
is better for you to have them turned or replaced.
By the way, my '98 S70 is sitting in my driveway with exactly 100,000
miles and original front rotors/pads (but it's not a T5).
Bonnet Lock - 30 Nov 2004 10:05 GMT
In an earlier contribution to this discussion,
> By the way, my '98 S70 is sitting in my driveway with exactly 100,000
> miles and original front rotors/pads (but it's not a T5).
I guess it depends on what sort of roads you drive on, as well as driving
style!
I replaced front and rear pads at 40,000 miles on my 1999 V70 2.5D (diesel)
but still have the original discs (rotors if you're west of the pond!)
which, although worn a bit, still ran true and were well within thickness
spec.

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Cheers,
Bonnet Lock
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