rotors almost never warp - it is almost always diagnosed as warping when in reality it is deposits - the stoptech site explains this quite well - in 30 years of doing this i have seen a grand total of something like 3 or 4 truly warped rotors, all on under-braked race cars or tow vehicles
noises would not be from warping anyway, and if they were warped you would absolutely feel it - it is impossible to hold the steering wheel still if it is a front rotor, and if it's the back the whole car shakes
noises are from an uneven trailing of the pad over the rotor - it takes less than .001" of deposit to cause noise or vibration - think of it like air passing over a reed in a flute - there isn't much you can do about it either - the pads will likely need to be changed and the rotors surfaced or replaced
it doesn't matter how new the stuff is either - i've screwed up pads in less than 100 miles
this happens because of either impatient break in of the pads (as i said, i've done it myself), or super heating them at some point (done that too) - contaminants also will cause this - it takes very little oil or other chemicals getting on them to cause noise
i have noisy brakes on the M3 - nothing i can do about it until i change the pads and rotors - we've tried the graphite stuff and we've manually scuffed them - no soap
you can try a very aggressive set of semi-metallic pads, 220 sandpaper the rotors, and go run a few laps and try to scuff the rotors, and then install new pads - i have about a 1 in 3 success rate with this - it's a lot of work though, and at that point you might as well just change everything
make sure you don't install a semi-metallic or track pad for a street car if you want things to be quiet - the quietest pad i have found, without the nasty heat and dust issues of OEM has been the porterfield R4S
94 Midnight Metallic Blue Cab Porsche 968 w/deviating cashmere/black interior and WAY too many mods to list - thanks to eric for creating
www.968forums.com
"It isn't nearly as expensive to do it right as it is to do it wrong."