If you aren't getting any pedal pulsation, pulling when you apply brakes, or shimmy in the steering wheel when using the brakes, or brake squeal, leave the brakes alone. Do inspect the pads for thickness and the rotors for any gouges but runnout is only checked if there is a complaint of pulsation in either the pedal or the steering wheel on braking. Runnout cannot be eliminated so the pins that hold the rotors will take up a small amount allowing the calipers to "float" absorbing minor amounts of runout. Runnout and parellelism is best checked off the car to eliminate measuring any play in the bearings of the car. Cutting the rotors is done way too casually by too many shops. Not only does it reduce the life of the rotor by cutting it unnessaceraly but it can introduce stresses which can cause the rotor to warp. When changing pads on disk brakes it is not required to "cut" the rotors. What is required is to present a fresh surface to the new pads so they can "seat in". That is done with a drill and a small disk attachment using #80 paper and using a circular motion so there is no tendancy to "thread" or have the pads move like the needle on a record player where they move up and down causing a clicking noise. Some things are best left alone. I heard of someone who used to check every bolt on his motorcycle once a week. After a couple of months they all started breaking off. It seems he gave each one just a little bit of a turn to make sure it was tight. Instead of working on the brakes I would concentrate on finding the clunking noise, check the trailing arm bolts and spacers again. David Teitelbaum vin 10757 --- In dmcnews@xxxx, "Walter Coe" <Whalt@xxxx> wrote: > I've heard some bad clunking noises long enough under my car, so I did a > complete inspection of every suspension component and found no problems. I > suppose I have some loose body bolts, but I'm not ready to take the rear > fascia off to tighten them. Anyway, while I had the car up in the air with > the wheels off, I decided to check my rotor runout since I told y'all that > I'd eventually get back to you about it. My front cross-drilled rotors had > no runout that I could measure, but the rear ones are a different story.