Try doing one on a 5cyl turbo! I’m R&R’ing the head on my 1979 300SD so pulled the starter and had it rebuilt while I had that whole side open (turbo off, exhaust dropped, etc.) I paid $145 for them to rebuild my factory Bosch. Didn’t want to shoot myself later for not doing it while I had the chance.
Ben near
From:
Sent: Thursday, February 17, 2011 9:03 PM
To:
Subject: [diesel_mercedes] New starter 82 240D
My 240D starter crapped out on me yesterday afternoon. I picked up a reman at Advance Auto. I had a choice of just the solenoid for $99 or the entire starter including the solenoid for $79. Guess which one I bought.
For this job I needed a 10mm allen socket, a long-handled socket wrench, some PB Blaster, the usual screwdrivers and misc other sockets, and a few very special curse words. I got the starter loose, but had no freaking idea on how to get it out. I struggled with it for 15 minutes, finally jacked the engine up and turned the steering wheel hard to the right. That opened up an exit hole with less than an eighth of an inch to spare. Oh, I momentarily forgot these cars are metric. I had 2mm to spare.
Shoving the new starter back up through the hole restored my memory of muscles I had forgotten I ever had. Those starters feel like they weigh 50 pounds, although in reality they probably aren't heavier than 49.
Once in place, all I had to do was hold the heavy b*st*rd in place and get half a turn of thread to catch and then the hard work would be over. Within thirty minutes I was successful.
The great news is that this same starter also fits my 300D, which is overdue for the same job, albeit a more difficult one from what I have read on this board. The core charge was only ten bucks. They must not really want these old starters turned back in.
Jim
No comments:
Post a Comment