Richard,
All went well. They the hubs were returned to the "as cast" hub, and they machined the face of the hub before I installed the new rotors onto the original K/H hubs.
The first place I went tried to tell me that the stud holes would damage the brake lathe cutting tool. I asked it they turned drilled and slotted, which they did. Sometimes people aren't too smart.
-Keith
Ha! Kids these days!
Many places will not do things they haven't already tried once, fear of causing damage to your part, maybe?...but probably because they don't own the machine & want to stay employed there.
I owned the extra hub and the lathe so for me, it was an easy choice to try it. Outside the box thinking is much better than "canned BS".
This is a much better idea, IMHO than machining a new rotor. For whatever else it is worth, you could be able to test the new rotor for runout on the brake lathe BEFORE mounting it onto the hub and also check it AGAIN, after pressing the studs in (assembling it). That is my plan anyways.
I sure am pleased that somebody is offering the new replacement rotors again.(without being one-piece design), but I can surely see WHY they switched to a one piece design when the tolerances are so narrow.