etyres mobile tyres fitting service in West Bromwich West Midlands

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Mobile tyres fitting service in West Bromwich West Midlands

We offer the lowest priced tyres and a mobile tyres fitting service for West Bromwich West Midlands. 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 West Bromwich West Midlands. 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 West Bromwich West Midlands

West Bromwich is a town in the English county of the West Midlands, five miles north west of Birmingham lying on the A41 London to Holyhead trunk road. It is usually considered to be part of the Black Country. West Bromwich is the largest town within the borough of Sandwell with a population of 136,940 (2001). The motto on the town's coat of arms proclaims in Latin "Labor Omnia Vincit" which translates as "Work Conquers All".

The town is famous for its football team, West Bromwich Albion. Engineering and chemicals are important to the town's economy, and a technical college is located there.

The Sandwell General Hospital is located near the town centre. The hospital is part of the Sandwell and West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust, and is one of the largest NHS teaching Trusts in the United Kingdom.

William Legge, 2nd Earl of Dartmouth had his seat at Sandwell Hall. Legge was unusual as an aristocrat of this period by being a Methodist and attending the Wednesbury Methodist meetings, where fellow Methodist - many of them colliers and drovers - knew him as "Brother Earl". See Black Country Methodism.

West Bromwich was first mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086, the name meaning "the little village on the heath of broom" (broom being a particular type of bush). A Benedictine priory existed in West Bromwich from the 12th century around which much of the town grew. In 1727 the town became a stop on the coaching road between London and Shrewsbury and its growth began. In the 19th century coal deposits were discovered, ensuring that the town grew rapidly as an industrial centre, with industries such as spring, gun and nail making developing.

In 1888 West Bromwich became a county borough, incorporating the village of Great Barr. It was expanded in 1966 to include most of the borough of Tipton and Wednesbury urban district, before joining with the neighbouring county borough of Warley in 1974 to form the Metropolitan Borough of Sandwell.

Charlemont Hall built c.1755 stood on the west side of the present Charlemont Crescent, in the Charlemont and Grove Vale neighborhood of the town. Charlemont Hall was described c. 1800 as 'a lofty neat-looking house of brick, faced with stone, with iron palisades etc. in front'. An east wing was added in 1855. The last occupants were Thomas Jones, town clerk of Wednesbury 1897-1921, and his widow.The house was demolished in 1948, and is now covered by a number of detached homes.

For roads, the M5 motorway between the West Midlands and the West Country passes through the town. West Bromwich has its own bus station in the town centre, with connections to Birmingham and other major towns in the West Midlands.

For rail, there are two rail routes through the town: The Great Western Railway opened the first section of its route between Birmingham and Wolverhampton on 14 November 1854, with a station at West Bromwich & Spon Lane. The trackbed of that line is now served by the Midland Metro light rail (tram) system.

The London and North Western Railway, later to become the LMSR, opened its line further to the south of the town. Here the station was named Spon Lane for West Bromwich. That has now closed, and the nearest main-line railway station is now Sandwell and Dudley.

The nearest airport which is approximately 16 miles away, is Birmingham International Airport.

Courtesy of Wikimedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Bromwich

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