We recently purchased a new car, it had been on the dealer's lot for a while, pictures on the dealer's website look like they were taken last Spring. Car had 57 miles on it when I drove it off the lot, so it hadn't been driven much.
I get vibration when braking, most noticed in the pedal, but some in the steering wheel as well. Vibration is most noticed when coming to a stop from 55-60 MPH or greater. Slow speed stopping, i.e. from <40 MPH almost unnoticeable. I describe the pulsation/vibration as warped rotors.
Rotors appear new, nothing visually out of place.
Dealer has had the car for a bit over 24 hours now. They claim everything brake related is in perfect working order, nothing out of spec.
The shop foreman suggest that the tires have flat spotted from sitting in one place so long, and that continuing to drive the car will "fix" the problem. Granted it has improved some, but with over 500 miles on the car now, the vibration is still quite noticeable.
The loaner car they put me in is almost identical to our new car, so identical it has the exact same problem. They claimed to have gotten yet another car that's been there a while to test drive and experienced the same issues with it too.
I'd expect to feel the vibration while driving too, not just braking if the tires truly had flat spots. There might be some vibration, but the roads all suck so bad it's hard to distinguish.
My experience with "flat spotting" has been from locking up brakes or on bias-ply/farm implements. I've had other cars with radials sit for a long time and never experienced this before.
The OEM tires in question are Continental ProContact something-something.
Should I really expect the problem to "fix" itself if I just keep driving it?