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Brake Disc Inspection Before Fitting: A Workshop Checklist

2026-05-06 8 min read By Eurospares

Most brake-related comebacks are caused by something the workshop missed at fitting time, not by something wrong with the disc itself. This is the inspection routine that catches problems before they reach the customer — practical checks any technician can run in five minutes with no special equipment.

Inspect the disc before it leaves the box

It sounds obvious, but a meaningful percentage of disc problems are introduced at the supplier or in transit, and they're far cheaper to catch on your bench than after the wheel has gone back on. Take the disc out of the box and look at it under good light before doing anything else.

Surface inspection

Coating check

Most premium aftermarket discs ship with an anti-corrosion coating on non-friction surfaces (the hub face, the vent fins, the outer edge). Confirm it's present and intact. The friction surfaces themselves may have a thin protective coating that burns off during bedding-in — that's normal and intentional. Heavy coating across the entire disc, including the friction surface, is a problem.

Quick reject criteria

Before you fit a disc, ask: Is the friction surface uniform? Is the hub face clean and flat? Are the edges crisp? Are the vents clear? If any answer is no, replace the disc — don't try to clean or work around it.

Verify the dimensions

Cross-reference catalogues are usually accurate, but verifying dimensions before fitting is fast insurance against a wrong-part error or a packaging mistake.

The four measurements that matter

The minimum-thickness stamp

Every road-legal disc is stamped with the minimum service thickness — usually on the hub face or the outer edge, marked as "MIN TH" or similar. Workshops often forget this when servicing a vehicle: the customer's old disc may still look serviceable, but if it's worn below the stamped minimum, fitting new pads to it is unsafe. Always check the existing disc against its own minimum-thickness stamp before deciding to reuse it.

Prepare the hub before fitting

This is the single biggest cause of post-fitting vibration complaints, and it's almost always avoidable.

Clean the hub face

The vehicle's hub face will have rust, brake dust, and old gasket material accumulated on it. The new disc has to seat flush against this surface — any debris between hub and disc translates into lateral runout, which the customer feels as steering-wheel vibration under braking.

Use a dedicated hub-cleaning tool or a wire brush in a drill. Clean until the hub face shows clean metal across the full contact ring. Don't skip this step even on a hub that looks reasonably clean — the difference between "looks clean" and "actually flat" is exactly the difference between a vibration-free job and a comeback.

Check hub runout

If you're fitting new discs and have any concern about the hub itself (especially on older vehicles), set up a dial indicator against the cleaned hub face and rotate it. Anything more than about 0.05 mm runout at the hub means the hub itself is the problem, not the disc — and a new disc fitted to a runout hub will inherit the same fault.

Fit and verify

Mount and torque correctly

Hand-thread all wheel studs through the disc before tightening. Don't let the disc hang on a single stud while you start the others — that bends the disc against the hub face. Snug all studs evenly, then torque the wheel to the manufacturer's spec in the correct cross-pattern (usually a star sequence on five-stud wheels). Uneven torque distorts the disc.

Check disc runout after fitting

If you have any concern, mount a dial indicator against the friction surface (not the edge) and rotate the disc by hand. New disc, freshly cleaned hub, correctly torqued — runout should be under 0.05 mm. Anything higher means the disc is sitting on something on the hub face, or the hub itself has runout. Don't proceed until it's resolved.

Verify caliper clearance

With the new disc in place but before fitting the pads, slide the caliper into position and check that the disc passes cleanly through the caliper opening with no contact at the inner edge. If the disc rubs the caliper bracket, something is wrong — either the disc is the wrong dimension or the caliper isn't seating correctly.

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Common errors to design out of your process

Fitting discs without cleaning the hub

By far the biggest cause of brake-job comebacks. Every fitter knows it matters; not every fitter does it every time. The vibration complaint that comes back two weeks later is almost certainly this.

Reusing pads on a new disc

Old pads have worn into the contour of the old disc. Putting them on a new disc means uneven contact, hot spots, premature glazing, and a customer who thinks the new discs are defective. New pads with new discs, every time.

Skipping the bedding-in handover

Bedding in is its own discipline (covered in a separate article). The relevant point here: don't fit new discs and pads, hand the keys over, and say nothing. The first 200 km of careful driving is what makes or breaks the job.

Mismatched left and right

If you're replacing one disc, replace both. A new disc on one side and a worn disc on the other gives uneven brake balance, pulls under braking, and uneven pad wear. Same applies front-to-rear: don't mix new-disc-old-pad combinations across an axle.

The five-minute checklist

If you do nothing else, do this before every disc fit:

  1. Inspect both sides of the disc — uniform finish, clean edges, clear vents
  2. Verify thickness, OD, and centre bore against the catalogue spec
  3. Wire-brush the hub face until clean metal shows across the full contact ring
  4. Hand-thread all studs before torquing; cross-pattern torque to spec
  5. Brief the customer on bedding-in before they drive away

The five steps above prevent something on the order of 80% of brake-job comebacks. Build them into the workshop's standard procedure and the rest of the brake business runs more smoothly.

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