Today, another insert stripped, and while I may be dumb enough to drive with three bolts in one wheel, I'm not dumb enough to drive with two, so now I have to do something about it. Here are the visuals.
#1 is the one that stripped a while back. #2 stripped this morning.

Here's a close-up of #1. The insert is gone. Originally it was just stripped, but over the months it backed itself most of the way out, so today I went ahead and pulled it out the rest of the way.

Here's a closeup of #2. The insert is still in there, but it doesn't look like it's in good shape - I'm assuming all the crud is the shavings that resulted from the stripping process.

Here are #3 and #4. The inserts are still in, and they look fine.


In this pic, there are three things. A is the lug bolts I currently have. B is one of a set of bolts I took off a parts car that was a more recent year than mine, but had the same wheels. I took them assuming they would be the same as what I already had, and would be good as backups/replacement, but obviously they are a different size, different length, and different thread. C is the insert I took from #1 above.

My rotors are in good shape and have plenty of thickness on them.
So now to the questions.
1. Am I going to have to replace the rotor with the damaged inserts, or could I just put in new inserts?
2. If I put in new inserts, am I going to have to rethread the hub to accept the inserts, or should the old threads work?
3. If I can't put in new inserts, and I have to buy new rear rotors, am I going to have to thread the new rotors to accept my lug bolts anyway?
4. If I have to replace the rotors, can I do that without opening up the brake system and having to bleed it when I put it all back together?
I've never done inserts like this myself and am not sure what is involved, especially if I have to cut new threads in the hub to accept new inserts. I've replaced brake pads, but never rotors, and don't know if there are tricks I should know or snags I should look out for. I'd appreciate any input, advice or help anyone has to offer.
Thanks,
-- se