So
@Finface the Brembo and Hawk racing pads are horrible for dust. Make no mistake, I avoid using them on the street except if I don’t want to trailer it and drive it to and from the track. They stop in a bit shorter distance cold to luke-warm than a Brembo and have a higher temp range they work at, therefore no fade when some of us really heat them up repeatedly. In other words drive the shit out of over two tons of mass and need to slow it down quick!
I can’t imagine that the Z26 pads would even hairline scratch a DP rotor. So you could keep the rotors on. That is what your are asking. Just be sure to abrasively scrape the racing pad residue off the rotor. Hell some moderate stops on the way home from the track will start that process. Then vise-versa when you put the racing pads on, scrape off the Z26 residue. Both ways use the racing pads for the scraping. Not going to work doing that with a Z26. That would be a bad scene. After you scrape the Z26 stuff off - which should not take much, you need to bed-in the racing pad. After you scrape the racing stuff off, you probably don’t need to worry about bedding the Z26 so much. I would just do a few moderate stops to test out it’s fundamental characteristics. Like flying a plane after someone did some crap to it, and you are the test pilot. You get that one!
This guy has a great series of videos that help explain some very important things to understand if you are going to manage or DIY stuff on your brakes.