Apologies in advance for what is likely a super noob question, but I've been debating this lately and can't settle on what's the best course of action.
First track day (for both the car and myself) is coming up in a couple weeks, so I've bought some DTC-60 pads to swap in for the event. For the street, I run stock (non-comp) calipers, zimmermann blanks, and textar pads. My plan is to swap to the DTC-60s a week or so before the event, just to avoid messing with the car right before putting it on track. I don't drive it much these days, so it'll probably only get driven once or twice before heading to the event.
Now for my question. The drive to the track is about two and a half hours and I know that track pads are super abrasive when not up to temp. So, should I even bother bedding them in beforehand? Or will the drive there with cold pads remove any deposits on the rotor anyway? Maybe just a couple warm up/learning laps will be enough to get the pads bed in?
And on a related note, for those who switch between street and track pads on the same rotor, do you bother with bed in when switching back to street pads? I guess ideally I would have two sets of rotors, but I don't really hear about many people doing this.
Thanks in advance for the help.
First track day (for both the car and myself) is coming up in a couple weeks, so I've bought some DTC-60 pads to swap in for the event. For the street, I run stock (non-comp) calipers, zimmermann blanks, and textar pads. My plan is to swap to the DTC-60s a week or so before the event, just to avoid messing with the car right before putting it on track. I don't drive it much these days, so it'll probably only get driven once or twice before heading to the event.
Now for my question. The drive to the track is about two and a half hours and I know that track pads are super abrasive when not up to temp. So, should I even bother bedding them in beforehand? Or will the drive there with cold pads remove any deposits on the rotor anyway? Maybe just a couple warm up/learning laps will be enough to get the pads bed in?
And on a related note, for those who switch between street and track pads on the same rotor, do you bother with bed in when switching back to street pads? I guess ideally I would have two sets of rotors, but I don't really hear about many people doing this.
Thanks in advance for the help.
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