RING FOR YOUR RUBBER Well these words are now cleared to depart and flash over computer monitors across the globe because I discovered yesterday that uploads to Aussies.space were working again since Monday evening, although Fosslinux never did reply to my email about it. Clearly Australia still isn't ready for this new-fangled internet thing. My attempts to get quotes for tyres by email resulted in only one reply between the four stores in the nearest tyre-stocking town. This indeed was the second round, after I'd tried to contact three via "request a quote" forms on their websites and got nothing back at all, then I hunted down some actual email addresses and tried going direct. But in the end they wore me down and I phoned them up instead, including the one who replied to my email because I forgot to ask whether they had the tyres in stock (they didn't, it turns out none did). Price range for the same tyre was $175 - $210 each between the different stores, so it does pay to check around. Goodyear seem to have the only models in this size that are advertised for some sort of rigidity and pot-hole resistance, which is important out here with pot-holes and gravel roads. However the size/model combinations available from the stores was the opposite of what the Goodyear website says is available! The cheapest place for the tyres (predictably "Goodyear Autocare", although less predictably they tried to sell me on Hankook tyres instead, which they had in stock) was indeed also the most expensive for wheel alignment, but overall it's still a $70 saving compared to the next place so I've booked in with them on Friday, when they expect to have received the tyres by mid-day. - The Free Thinker PS. I just remembered the American dual-meaning of "rubber". Sorry to anyone expecting a story about something more saucy than tyre purchasing advice. :)