And here is the right side (side opposite the caliper puck). You can tell there was a texture difference in abrasion action on the caliper puck side during the ceramic pad's duration of service.
I would theorize that maybe the caliper puck allows more incidental pad vibration, being a somewhat more mobile element than the "stationary" legs of the opposite side. The puck side may see a difference in non-braking separation distance as it is the part that moves away when you let go of the lever. The opposite housing can move too, but it weighs a lot more and has more friction acting on it. More mobility and relatively more separation space may account for the little waffles in the wear pattern??
Heck, I'm really just guessing here. Who knows?
If EBC's really prove out to be less abrasive than SBS's I may not put the SBS's back on at all. But we don't really know that for sure yet, now do we?
To quantify this, I guess I had better dig up my old measurement post from when I put the SBS pads on the bike and take some brand new post SBS measurements now so I will have some thing to compare against. I'll use a micrometer since we are dicing a few thousandths worn off the each side of the rotors at this point in time.
Measuring untouched steel at rim = 0.1762" considered "as new"
Measuring centermost worn portion
after wearing out Suzuki pads = 0.1750" (.0012" wear from one year of Suzuki pads)
Measuring centermost worn portion
after 1 year of SBS pad wear = 0.1706" (.0044" wear from one year of SBS pads)
Total wear is 0.0056" at this stage of the game, with the wear showing itself more in the center of the "shiny zone" than to either side of the zone.
Clymer manual states the rotor wear limit to be 0.160" so I think a dealer would try to sell me a rotor pretty much right after my first SBS 100% complete pad wear-out change.
Heck, I've only got 0.010" of rotor life left .....
This would surely suck big-time, as Suzuki charges a lot for that rotor, $179.95 plus shipping from Bike Bandit to be exact.