Anyway she had a couple of ''moments'' in the car on friday where the back and swung out. Luckily the Anti Skid Control caught it in time but she cacked herself

So I was faced with 2 new tyres. The size is 225 x 50 x 16'' quite rare and expensive for a 'decent' make and normaly at least £100.00 each, I had been putting it off to be honest, what with christmas and all, and it's only a 90BHP car and it has ASC fitted.
I thought I would investigate second hand tyres (for the first time ever) as I am skint. I popped down to a place on an industrial estate and had a look at what they had. After a while, and a nice chat with the gaffer, he took me over the road to their warehouse where they had just had a delivery from Germany last week.
I rummaged through all the 225 x 50's and found a couple of beauties.......Thing is I was able to have a REALLY good look at the tyre all around it, inside it, everything. I really took my time and inspected them in fine detail, and the bloke was fine about it.
Anyway I decided to have them......2 Michelin Pilot SX MXX3's (porsche tyres) with 5.5mm of tread on them, no wear on the shoulders, fitted and balanced and water bath tested all for £45.00


I stood right with the bloke fitting them on the rims and got a good look at them rotating on the balancing machine. They rotated really nice, dead straight no bulges or uneveness, perfect! one needed 5 grammes and the other 10 grammes.
I got talking to them and they get all their stock from Germany and Sweeden. Apparently they have very strict laws on tyre tread depth and puncture repairs etc. so they end up over here.
Best of all is that the Michelin Pilot's have a very good write up, and I could not get the back end out at all, even when trying to provoke oversteer on a wet roundabout.
I thought about it afterwards and thought, even if I bought new ones after a few months they would be part worn tyres anyway. I suppose as long as you get a GOOD look at them first I can't really see the problem.