Once again, I find myself wondering why a certain part of the BITOG population, which is OCD about oils, oil standards, other fluids, and filters to the point of destructive (but hardly consclusive) examinations are so dead set against maintainng brakes and tires to the same fastidious and exacting degree.
You know, those things that play the greatest role in ensuring that your, and others', lives and limbs remain intact.
Anyone care to explain?
Not sure... I can throw out a few ideas.
OEM brakes can be (sometimes) crazy reliable (as brakes should be), so someone who hasn't had the number of "warped rotors" (the usual diagnosis, right or wrong, for brake shudder) that others have (like me), might indeed be lulled into complacency. Check the pads for sufficient thickness, and let it go at that.
People come to this forum primarily for OIL stuff, and so the population here is weighted towards that topic and skill set, not towards brakes.
I think, if you pick any maintenance topic applicable to automobiles, you will find a slice of the population pie here that takes a "leave it alone" attitude.
Thinking back, I did a crazy number of disc brake jobs before having any problems, and being forced to study-up on the subject and up my game. I can remember exactly when those problems began, on my 94 Dakota some time around year 1999 or 2000. I did a brake job at 50K that lasted 10K until unbearable shudder. Then I had a "pro" do it that lasted less than 10K until unbearable shudder returned. (That's a whole story in itself.) Then I got my game on with carefully selected rotors, turned at a race machine shop, carefully lubed and checked for eccentricity, and those brakes lasted nigh forever.
I think the timing of all that has to do with: the arrival of Chinese metallurgy, the departure of asbestos and copper, and the rise of pad formulations that have lower dusting, better performance and feel, but are more likely to leave uneven pad deposits associated with brake shudder. Indeed, the first time I had shudder on an OEM, factory set of brakes at "low" mileage (under 50K) was on my 2010 Camry. When I pulled down the brakes, eccentricity was fine, awesome even, but half the left rotor was glazed on one side, and the opposite side was glazed on the other side, thus maximizing shudder. A quick sanding job and I'm still running those brakes 45K later. So in other words, one can have years of brake mechanic experience from the 70's, 80's and 90's and little trouble, and/or get lucky and avoid issues, and thus think brakes are a non-issue.