Good morning!
So I took a trip down south, to Edmonton but also to Calgary to get some books. Contacted the rim/tire guy who happens to live by Olds (on the way to Calgary) and made arrangements to stop in.
Funny story. The guy is a farmer (as am I for those who might now know!). My first thought was "oh, that is what the rims look like when they are clean - they look good"! Plus the guy even lives on a short stretch of gravel road like me! He wouldn't lower his price from $300 but I guess considering what the rims are worth I shouldn't complain and yes I bought them. Kind of hard to plead poverty when he knows you're a Z06 owner I suppose!!!!!!!!!!
Crazy land prices there around Olds too - right around his area 1.2 to 1.6 million $ for 160 ac. When people up here where I farm are just starting to pay 300,000 K you get sticker shock!!!!
His story is interesting. His name is Scott. I told him about the website and so I hope he'll join up. Anyway a dyed in the wool Corvette fan. He's owned a C4, 3 C5's and the C6 Z06. I was curious to know how he ended up with a front and rear tire and rim and this is the story.
He let his brother-in-law borrow the car. The BL turned off the traction control and went around a corner and downshifted and went WOT. The car, of course, snapped to the right, hit a curb, broke the front tire off/cracked the spokes on the rim and did $14K of damage to the car. So when the car was repaired he replaced the rims and tires and so these were off the other side. He subsequently sold the car (90K km's for 34.5K $) and has ordered a 2016 C7 for the spring.
Scott also said that the bald rear tire, a Goodyear Eagle F1 had only 1500 km on them. Super sticky he felt, and only one burnout on a trip to Edmonton and he couldn't believe that they wouldn't last any longer than that. FYI one driver's experience...........he replaced them with Nitto Invo's I recall.
So anyway the front is good to go for a spare and the rear is as well but as he said in the ad there isn't much tread left on it. But for normal going to get grocery speeds it would be fine and in my case would have allowed me some further trips in October.
And no, still no word from the tire store so I guess I'll seek a new place to buy the tire I need from. Sort of PO'ed about that experience though.
Had a scary moment on the way home though. At night, 30 km south of Valleyview I lost control of the truck. Going 110 on a divided highway and no idea it was icy like this. And yes I do have very good winter tires even. Anyway the truck just broke out and into the ditch I headed. I really thought that at this speed I was going to roll the truck. But it changed direction three times, I didn't overcorrect the steering and I was darn lucky that the tires never caught an edge either - not that much snow yet. Plus there were no trees or rocks either. Anyway I scrubbed off speed and then was able to go up the ditch again and rejoin the highway. I slowed down but people were passing me like crazy. I dropped to 90 km and about 5 km further on had the back end go out again, almost hit a truck/horse trailer - the guy never slowed down and just pulled to the shoulder and passed me as did many subsequent vehicles. A few km more and there was a semi on it's side in the ditch. So called 911, talked with the driver when he got out to make sure he was OK and drove the rest of the way to Valleyview at 40 km and spent the night. Sad we were the only vehicle that stopped at this truck accident too...........
But I thought in hindsight that my autocross driving must have helped. I never thought when I was going in the ditch but just reacted and it seems properly. Still not sure why i had such traction problems compared to everyone else that I saw that night.......
Cheers,
Garry