I was getting measurements all over the place, ended up with the drivers side of the axle sitting on a block on the concrete floor (so the backing plate wasn't ruined, as I don't have jackstands yet, never had a level hard surface to work on lol), with the dial indicator base sitting on the concrete, or even anchored to a 20 pound chunk of steel. Not only would the runout of the rotor move the indicator assembly enough to mess up the reading, but pushing up on the truck even with a finger was enough to induce thousandth's of "runout", as also was rotating the hub by hand.
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Yeah the way I had things set up it was easy to push/pull and induce a false reading... like when a freind leaned on the truck and my dial inicator jumping around - "hey get off of there!"
Anyways, got one of the assemblies returned at a different shop, and it went from 13 thousandths out to 4-5 thousandths out. that is at least 1 thousandth better than the old rotor I took off... I'm giving up for the time being and installed everything. I'll check everything in a few thousand miles and see if it gets better or worse with use...
unless it doesn't work right at all, and then to hell with this P.O.S.

Then again, when adjusted to the specs given, they are already hard to rotate, can you even turn a rotor with all bearing play removed?
