If you are swapping pads for street and track, make sure the pad compounds are compatible. All Carbotech materials are, FYI. I like XP-8 pads for track use.
One thing I learned the hard way is most track pads don't wear on the disk, they are making contact with the pad deposit left on the disk. When you swap pads to street use, the pads are making contact with the pad deposit so one can have un-even deposit of the new pad on the rotor surface, creating pedal judder. If you end up with this, I have had times it is not possible to get the rotors to run smooth ever again. When I am swapping pads back and forth, I will re-bed them every time. First track session, work them very hard to get them up to temperature quickly to transfer a new layer of pad to the rotor.
One thing I learned the hard way is most track pads don't wear on the disk, they are making contact with the pad deposit left on the disk. When you swap pads to street use, the pads are making contact with the pad deposit so one can have un-even deposit of the new pad on the rotor surface, creating pedal judder. If you end up with this, I have had times it is not possible to get the rotors to run smooth ever again. When I am swapping pads back and forth, I will re-bed them every time. First track session, work them very hard to get them up to temperature quickly to transfer a new layer of pad to the rotor.