Yes and no. If she plans on having the work done at some type of repair facility, then no. If you are doing the work in the driveway, then yes. On cars this small and light the rotors are not all that expensive to outright replace. Now a F350 truck on the other hand....What he said. Also, I've never seen the need to have rotors machined personally. If I'm going to go through all the trouble of taking them off, I'm just going to replace them outright, and OEM-spec rotors can easily be had for most cars for as low as $50/axle.
The steering wheel is vibrating when I brake. I am more than likely having the work done at Walser. A friend mentioned since it's still under warranty, they may not replace the rotors, but there may be a possibility they would machine them.Yes and no. If she plans on having the work done at some type of repair facility, then no. If you are doing the work in the driveway, then yes. On cars this small and light the rotors are not all that expensive to outright replace. Now a F350 truck on the other hand....
But, not to muddle the facts with other talk. As mentioned, if you are not having a vibe in the steering wheel or the seat of your pants when braking then I would leave it alone.
I didn't think they would be covered either. But, Walser did end up machining them at no charge and said the rotors were covered under the warranty. I guess it's a temporary fix until I can get them replaced. I hate going there, I assume they think because I'm a chick I don't know anything about cars and they will try to screw me over any way they can. I dealt with the service manager though, who seemed to be in a good mood. I guess that was in my favor!Yeah, don't count on having the brakes covered. I would recommend not having the work done at a dealer unless they are doing it under warranty or are having a special... pads/rotors is an extremely simple job, and dealers love to rape you on that kind of work.