A interesting article which may change some thoughts and also reinforce others. It's a long read but worth it.
Myths of the Braking System
"Depending upon the friction compound, easy use of the brakes for an extended period may lead to the removal of the transfer layer on the discs by the abrasive action of the pads. When we are going to exercise a car that has seen easy brake use for a while, a partial re-bedding process will prevent uneven pick up."
So if you're like me, and your brakes were broken in slowly and easily, before tracking the car, do the vigorous bed in process: analogous to stretching and doing light exercises before engaging in some serious athletic demands of the body.

If you just take the Stinger out there and start heavy braking before each turn, you're going to get lumpy brakes (or at least the risk is great).
"The only fix for extensive uneven deposits involves dismounting the discs and having them Blanchard ground - not expensive, but inconvenient at best. A newly ground disc will require the same sort of bedding in process as a new disc. The trouble with this procedure is that if the grinding does not remove all of the cementite inclusions, as the disc wears the hard cementite will stand proud of the relatively soft disc and the thermal spiral starts over again. Unfortunately, the cementite is invisible to the naked eye.
"Taking time to properly bed your braking system pays big dividends but, as with most sins, a repeat of the behavior that caused the trouble will bring it right back."
Surely, this answers 99% of all complaints here. Surfacing rotors is done by "rote"

, by those who don't have any scientific way of determining if the "Blanchard ground" has in fact removed all the cementite spots; and therefore the aggrieved spots remain: which of course results in a few weeks or months (at best) before the lumpy brakes return. Time to get new rotors and do the bed in. This article details how to go about that more fulsomely than anything I've read so far. I'm saving this page!
