Mobile tyres fitting service in Crewe Cheshire
We offer the lowest priced tyres and a mobile tyres
fitting service for Crewe Cheshire. See our tyres price
check comparison. No call out charge. All leading brands
of car tyres, van tyres, 4X4 tyres & run-flat tyres. We
fit tyres at your place of work or home driveway. Tyres
fitting and balancing is fully guaranteed. Also car
batteries. Our low prices for tyres and car batteries
are fully inclusive, no hidden extras. We don't have
expensive tyres depots so our prices are always low.
We offer a complete range of tyres backed up by our
efficient and cost effective mobile tyres fitting
service for Crewe Cheshire. So, rather than having to
travel to a traditional tyre depot to have tyres fitted,
you remain at home or at work and we come to you. This
is much more convenient… and, it also greatly reduces
our operating costs so we are able to slash our selling
prices of tyres by up to 40%.
Unlike many companies selling tyres on-line we have a
head office call centre. This provides advice and
technical information on all aspects of tyres. Also, for
those who prefer to place their order for tyres by
telephone, rather than by buying tyres on-line, we have
a freephone facility (0800 028 9000).
We are proud of our Customer service record, and we
fully guarantee our work. Please feel free to call our
freephone telephone number if you would like personal
help and service, we are always ready and willing to
explain the choices and make sure you are happy with our
sales and service for car tyres and car batteries.
More about Crewe Cheshire
Crewe is a town in south Cheshire, in the north west
of England. It is the major town in the Borough and
Parliamentary Constituency of Crewe and Nantwich.
According to the 2001 census the urban area had a
population of 67,683. It is twinned with M?on in France
and Bischofsheim, near Mainz, Germany.
Crewe is perhaps best known for its association with the
railway industry, being a major junction and once home
to a bustling railway works. From 1946 to 2002 it was
the home of Rolls-Royce and Bentley motor car
production. From the end of 2002 Rolls-Royce production
ceased at Crewe while the Pyms' Lane factory now
produces Bentley motor cars exclusively.
Crewe did not come to prominence until the late 1830s,
when the Grand Junction Railway (GJR) company chose it
as the site for its locomotive works (known in the
surrounding area simply as Crewe Works) and a station.
Winsford, situated seven miles north of Crewe, rejected
an earlier original plan then local landowners thwarted
the second choice plan to locate four miles away in
Nantwich. When the GJR opened its station in fields near
Crewe Hall in 1837, the population of Crewe (c. 1831),
the nearest Cheshire village, was just 70.
A new town grew up alongside the increasingly busy
station, with the population exploding to reach 40,000
by 1871. GJR chief engineer Joseph Locke helped lay out
the town.
The town has a large park, Queen's Park (laid out by
engineer Francis Webb), which is a product of 1880s
railway politics: the London and North Western Railway
(successor to the GJR) bought the land and donated it to
the town as a park in order to prevent the Great Western
Railway from building a railway line through it.
The railway provided an endowment towards the building
and upkeep of Christ Church. Until 1897 its vicar,
non-conformist ministers and schoolteachers received
concessionary passes, the school having been established
in 1842. The company provided a doctor's surgery with a
scheme of health insurance. A gasworks was built and the
works water supply was adapted to provide drinking water
and a public baths. The railway also opened a cheese
market in 1854 and a clothing factory for John Compton
who provided the company uniforms, while McCorquodale of
Liverpool set up a printing works. Nevertheless, the
dominance of the railway industry was such that times of
recession were keenly felt.
Crewe railway station is less than a mile from the town
centre. It is one of the largest stations in north-west
England and a major interchange station on the West
Coast Main Line, and has 12 platforms in use and enjoys
a direct service to London (Euston) (2/hour, about 2
hours), Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham, Glasgow,
Cardiff and many other cities.
It is on the A530 and A534 and less than 10 miles from
the M6 motorway
Courtesy of Wikimedia,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crewe |