Unnecessarily early pad and disc replacement is one of the most remunerative scams of the garage industry.
We had a Golf, at the 30,000 service the garage reported that the pads needed replacing very soon. Having just put new tyres on the front I had seen that there was plenty of life in the pads so I told them I would sort it later.
At the 40,000 mile service they said the same but I had removed a wheel before the service (steel ones so difficult to check unlike some alloys) and knew they were fine but they reported again that the pads were near the end of life.
At 50,000 miles it was exactly the same story, just innored them.
Before the 60,000 mile service I had full set of tyres fitted and got the chap to look at the pads. He said they were good for a few more miles yet. Believe it or not at the service the garage never mentioned the pads.
Changed them at 63,000 miles myself when the weather improved, still on the car 4 years later when we sold it. It was still on the original (non-vented) discs and rear shoes in the drums.
Over my 48 years of motoring I have in truth changed very few sets of brake pads. The most pad hungry was a Golf GTi, front pads lasted about 35,000 miles, front discs 70,000 miles and I changed the well worn rear pads at the same time. The most pad hungry cars dad had were a Renault 12 (14,000 miles) and a Talbot Horizon (about 12,000) miles but in fairness the pads were so soft they never marked the discs.
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