We study the star formation history of normal spirals by using a large and
homogeneous data sample of local galaxies. For our analysis we utilise detailed
models of chemical and spectrophotometric galactic evolution, calibrated on the
Milky Way disc. We find that star formation efficiency is independent of
galactic mass, while massive discs have, on average, lower gas fractions and
are redder than their low mass counterparts; put together, these findings
convincingly suggest that massive spirals are older than low mass ones. We
evaluate the effective ages of the galaxies of our sample and we find that
massive spirals must be several Gyr older than low mass ones. We also show that
these galaxies (having rotational velocities in the 80-400 km/s range) cannot
have suffered extensive mass losses, i.e. they cannot have lost during their
lifetime an amount of mass much larger than their current content of gas+stars.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, MNRAS in pres