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I would expect to get at least 100,000 miles out of brake rotors. Granted with all the twisty mountain roads in your country, that mileage would be much less.On the table top flat parts of the American midwest, I would imagine a lot of drivers get exceptional mileage (300,000 miles?) from brake rotors.
Go to Rock Auto.com. Find your plug. I replaced all 16 plugs in my Durango Hemi for about $14 each. Bosch double iridium. The best. The originals at 100,000 still looked good and the gaps were at spec. No need to overspend.
SparkPlugs.com is also a good place to buy spark plugs. $11 apiece or so for iridium plugs.Of course, this is in the US and not Europe.$50 apiece? Sounds as if you got taken for a ride. -Stretch
In response to the original question, why not charge $50?If people will pay $X, then someone will charge $X.It is up to the consumer to decide if the purchase price is worth it.Who hasn't used Carb Cleaner, a wire brush, and a propane torch to rejuvenate a fouled spark plug?Remember the good ole days when you could buy the little spark plug sandblasting units from the ads in a motorcycle magazine....This thread would make a great episode for Project Farm. Run the plugs and after every 5,000 miles (approximately 20,000,000 sparks?), clean them, re-gap them, measure electrode and ground dimensions, run a series of continuity/resistance tests, sharpen the eroded/round edges with a file, test for the maximum gap the spark would jump after refurbishment....Wouldn't that be the cat's pajamas if we learned that spark plugs have a infinite life with just a little TLC....
Cannot clean and re-gap what isn't there.