I would have expected a story like this to involve rim wear on a non-CSS rim. For example one of my neighbors had a rim split, but he commutes on his bike and had worn down the rim braking surface. (That is in part why I bought the CSS.)
I can't imagine that the CSS would have caused this type of failure, a split in the middle is far from where the carbide was added to it.
A friend of mind did a cross country (USA) trip that I think was about 4,000 miles (~6,000 km). He said that everybody in the group had to replace a rear wheel. I think that was excessive too, they were all carrying camping gear on their bikes but still that is not that much weight. There are some overweight people that put that much weight on a bike wheel without any camping gear on the bike. He said that they dipped their wheels in the Atlantic at the start and in the Pacific at the end. I wonder if they might have gotten some corrosion from the salt water in the rims? I have no clue if this is a valid concern, but a common factor in this case is that they all started the trip with a salt water bath in their rims. Was there any sign of corrosion inside the split Grizzly rims?
If you replace the rim with the same brand and model of rim and if you reuse your spokes, you can:
- loosen all spokes but keep the spoke nipples threaded onto each spoke,
- tape the new rim next to the old one putting the valve holes together,
- move one spoke at a time from the old rim to the new (obviously do this with the easiest ones first),
- when completed, true it up, prestress it and check final tension.
This is a lot less labor than a new build with new spokes. If you know how to true a wheel but not how to lace up a new wheel, you at least can transfer the spokes from an old to new rim this way.