High-Carbon Steel Formulation
Built for improved thermal stability during repeated high-heat braking cycles.
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Brake Rotor Friction Ring · WaveSlot · Track & Competition Use
A racing-grade high-carbon steel brake rotor friction ring built for repeated high-heat cycles, stable pedal feel, and consistent friction behavior across demanding track sessions.
This rotor friction ring is designed around controlled heat management and friction-face stability. The high-carbon steel formulation helps improve resistance to distortion, heat checking, and stress-related cracking that can appear when standard replacement rotors are pushed into competition use. The result is a more predictable pedal and a friction face designed to hold up across long brake events.
The WaveSlot pattern is machined to keep the pad interface active by creating repeated leading edges as the rotor turns. It helps evacuate brake dust, gas, and surface contamination from between the pad and rotor, supporting a more consistent contact patch during aggressive braking. Pair with the correct race pad compound and a proper bedding procedure for best results.
Built for improved thermal stability during repeated high-heat braking cycles.
Machined slot pattern helps keep the pad interface active and supports debris evacuation.
Designed for low runout and consistent pedal feel when matched with the correct hat and caliper setup.
Designed to improve resistance to heat checking and stress-related cracking under load.
Suitable as a replacement friction ring for existing competition setups or custom two-piece rotor assemblies.
| Brake Rotor Friction Ring | |
|---|---|
| Product Type | Racing-grade brake rotor / friction ring |
| Material | High-carbon steel |
| Friction Face | WaveSlot pattern |
| Intended Use | Track and competition braking |
| Configuration | Friction ring for existing setups or custom two-piece assemblies |
| Recommended Pairing | TTSPORT billet aluminum rotor hats; race-compound pads |
Exact diameter, thickness, vane count, and bolt pattern depend on the variant selected. Confirm dimensions against your existing caliper and rotor hat before ordering.
This product page describes the racing friction ring only. Rotor hats, bobbins / mounting hardware, brake pads, calipers, brake hoses, and complete two-piece rotor assemblies are not included unless separately specified on the final order.
This rotor is offered as a friction ring, making it a direct option for drivers replacing worn rings on an existing two-piece assembly or building a custom configuration. Combine it with TTSPORT billet aluminum rotor hats to complete a serviceable, weight-optimized two-piece rotor.
No. It is sold as a racing friction ring. Pair it with compatible TTSPORT billet aluminum rotor hats to build a complete two-piece assembly.
High-carbon steel, chosen for thermal stability and resistance to heat checking under repeated high-heat braking cycles.
Slotted friction faces typically wear pads faster than smooth rotors. That is expected on a track-focused rotor and is the trade-off for active pad interface and debris evacuation.
It is designed for race-compound pads. Street pads will work mechanically but will not deliver the heat tolerance or friction stability this rotor is built for.
Diameter, thickness, and bolt pattern vary by variant. Verify dimensions against your caliper and rotor hat, or contact us with your setup details.
Send your rotor diameter, thickness, vane type, bolt pattern, rotor hat spec, caliper model, and pad compound. TTSPORT will help confirm whether this friction ring matches your setup.
Brake Rotors · Fitment · Installation · Bedding · Care Guide
Brake rotors are not just round discs that bolt behind the wheel. Rotor diameter, thickness, offset, vane direction, surface pattern, material, coating, hat design, pad compound, and driving use all affect fitment and performance.
This guide explains how to choose, install, bed in, inspect, and care for TTSPORT brake rotors so the rotor and pad system works as intended.
Do not order rotors by appearance or diameter alone. Two rotors can look similar but use different offsets, hub registers, vane directions, bolt patterns, thicknesses, or hat designs.
Brake rotors are application-specific. A wrong rotor offset or thickness can misalign the caliper, create pad overhang, cause vibration, or prevent wheel clearance.
The best rotor is the one matched to the vehicle and driving use. Surface pattern alone does not make a rotor better.
Best for quiet daily use, low NVH, and smooth pad wear. A good choice for commuting and OE-style replacement.
Designed to keep the pad interface active and help clear dust, gas, and water film. Expect more pad wear than a smooth street rotor.
Often chosen for appearance and wet-weather surface clearing. For hard track use, confirm the rotor design is approved for sustained heat.
Use a separate friction ring and rotor hat to reduce weight and allow ring replacement when the hat remains within service limits.
Used for better thermal stability and damping compared with basic gray-iron replacement rotors.
Require compatible pads, correct bedding, and strict fitment confirmation. Do not treat CCB rotors like standard iron rotors.
Rotor installation quality directly affects pedal feel, vibration, pad wear, and service life. A premium rotor installed on a dirty hub can still develop brake judder.
Safety: Do not install a rotor if the hub face is dirty, the rotor does not sit flat, the direction is unclear, or the caliper does not center correctly over the disc.
The hub must be clean and flat. Rust or debris between the hub and rotor can create lateral runout and brake vibration.
Confirm left / right orientation if the rotor uses directional vanes, directional slots, directional drilling, or asymmetric cooling design.
Measure rotor runout if possible, especially on performance applications or vehicles with previous vibration complaints.
Check that the pad sweeps correctly across the friction face and does not overhang the rotor edge or hat area.
Confirm wheel spoke and barrel clearance after the rotor and caliper are installed. Rotor size changes can affect final caliper position.
Torque wheel nuts, caliper bolts, bracket bolts, and two-piece rotor hardware to the required specification. Do not guess torque values.
Two-piece rotors need additional inspection because the friction ring, hat, and mounting hardware work together as a serviceable assembly.
A two-piece rotor is not automatically floating. Floating behavior depends on the hat, friction ring, bobbins, fasteners, and assembly design.
Bedding is required for new rotors and pads. The goal is to create an even pad material transfer layer on the rotor surface and gradually heat-stabilize the rotor before full-load use.
Street pads, race pads, carbon ceramic pads, iron rotors, two-piece rotors, and CCB rotors may require different bedding procedures. Use the supplied TTSPORT procedure for the specific system.
After the initial bedding cycle, give the rotor and pad pair time to settle. Avoid treating a fresh brake setup like a fully heat-cycled race system on day one.
Rotors are wear items. Inspect them more often if the vehicle sees track use, mountain roads, towing, winter salt, off-road use, or aggressive pad compounds.
Do not run rotors below minimum thickness. Thin rotors have reduced heat capacity and can compromise braking safety.
Do not continue driving if the brake system shows any of the following symptoms. Inspect the system or contact a qualified brake technician before using the vehicle again.
Send your vehicle details, current rotor size, caliper model, wheel specs, pad compound, driving use, and any symptoms you notice. TTSPORT will help confirm the correct rotor type and care path for your setup.
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