Re: [diesel_mercedes] Re : Co$t Of Ownership ~ MY View

 

On 1/7/2012 1:43 PM, Nate wrote:

 


Yes , the jacking points are those round holes along the rocker panels , one way to test is to jack up the car in question ~ if the round metal tube/hole part , raises up and begins to crinkle the metal above it , the car is JUNK ~ worth parts only although you _can_ drive it this way for many years , it's going to be problematic , especially if you have a flat tire .

Cheap Wagons or any other typ of car , are _EASY_to find : just go _LOOK_ at every one you see for sale , when you find one with cosmetic faults ~ auger in like white on rice ~ no one ever buys the ugly cars so if it works O.K. , pitch a fit about every blemish , bald or mis matched tire , replacement stereo (the Beckers are far better than the $3,000 'up grades ')

Many people have NO IDEA what they're doing selling and will jump at cash in hand .

Many Dealers and Independent M-B repair shops will have good used Diesel Wagons they're " going to fix up and sell " (someday) - I know of one like this in Pasadena , I can't get him to give me a price .

VW's ~ old Diesels are a ' converted ' Gasoline engine , they were bad when new , I still don't trust them , both my big brothers had them and loved them .

NEW Beetles have a very good TDI engine but as you mentioned, the rest of the car is weak at best .

I have _only_ old cars and I find that by doing the repairs & maintenance my self , it's *very* cheap indeed .

-Nate
Alan wrote:
>
> Thanks everyone for the welcome and tips. Thanks Rob for that link to the list of engines/models.
>
> > the turbo is a big alloy snail looking thing under the air cleaner on the right side of the engine
>
> Great; that's what I'll look for.
>
> > Also , look closely under the rear side windows , rocker panels and battery tray for any rust holes ~ by the time you see bubbles or pin holes , it's *VERY* serious .
>
> OK, good to know. I also read the jacking points are problem areas. Is that the same thing you are mentioning for the rocker panels, or in addition?
>
> > In closing : BEWARE the ' cheap ' Mercedes ! it will always be the MO$T EXPEN$IVE CAR YOU EVER OWN ! . (but , you'll polly love it anyway , I do)
>
> Well, I'm definitely thinking that over. I certainly believe that a good Mercedes mechanic will be expensive. For those doing their own work, does the adage still hold true?
>
> I've also been reading up on VW diesels. They have a devoted fan base too, but it sure seems from anecdotes that VW reliability in the last decade or two does not live up to their historic reputation. My wife got a big grin when she saw a New Beetle TDI for sale in the paper because she always thought they looked cute, but I'm leery of how many stories I've heard of people having all kinds of expensive problems. Sounds like TDI engine is good, rest of the car is questionable. Seems like people love the cars so much they put up with all the issues. I guess I've been spoiled by my Hondas which have been simple, reliable and cheap to maintain. If diesel Hondas were common in the US I'd pick that in a heartbeat, but no such animal here.
>
> My main candidates I'm mulling over are a Rabbit, Jetta Wagon, or 300TD. You know the saying: good, fast, cheap-- pick any two.
>
> My impressions at this point:
>
> Rabbit- reliable, easy to work on, low purchase price, no turbo=slow accel, good MPG (40+).
>
> Jetta Wagon- good MPG (40+), turbo=fast, higher purchase, reliability and ease of work unsure???
>
> 300TD- low purchase, turbo=decent accel, MPG not as good (20-30), reliability good I think?
>
> I'm going to be hard pressed to find a Jetta Wagon or Golf TDI that I can afford, so it is probably going to come down to the Rabbit versus 300TD. The obvious competition there for me is the high MPG of the Rabbit versus the awesome styling of the Mercedes, which will probably put maintenance/repair as a major deciding factor.
>
> So I'm trying to figure out, is keeping a W123 300TD running in good condition really more EXPEN$IVE than any other 30-year-old car, if I'm doing the wrenching myself?
>
> Thanks for everyone's thoughts and opinions.
>
> - Alan
>

Actually with a cheap trolley jack in the trunk you can run a rusty 123 for a long time.  The critical point is when the rear springs start to drop through the swing arms or the swing arms start to crack apart from rust.  Even then if you can find unrusty parts it's still repairable, but a PITA.  Actually the rust was figured in by MB.  As the engine wore and the power was reduced, the weight loss from the rusty pieces falling off kept the power to weight ratio in balance.

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[diesel_mercedes] Re: Re : Routine Air Conditioning Service

 

Yep Propane is a very good refrigerant, how would it work for compressor lube? Guess you could just add in a bit, looked like they put about 1.5 oz into mine.
And if the weather gets too cool, you kin light er up.<G>
Tony.

--- In diesel_mercedes@yahoogroups.com, diyernh@... wrote:
>
> I'm thinking propane...?
>
>
> Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: "Nate" <vwnate1@...>
> Sender: diesel_mercedes@yahoogroups.com
> Date: Sat, 07 Jan 2012 18:54:30
> To: <diesel_mercedes@yahoogroups.com>
> Reply-To: diesel_mercedes@yahoogroups.com
> Subject: [diesel_mercedes] Re : Routine Air Conditioning Service
>
>
> Did they use R12 or what ? .
>
> -Nate
> Tony Bragged :
> >
> > AH I love Mexico.
> > Took the car in yesterday to have the air conditioning brought up to snuff. They purged the old refrigerant, tested everything, lubed the compressor, recharged the system and now I can make ice cubes - well almost.
> > Just great took a trip out to the airport to pick up friends of friends and was able to cool the cabin with the fan on low and the wheel off the max setting.
> > Cost 600 pesos or about $46.
> > Tony
> >
>

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Re: [diesel_mercedes] Re: The right wrench for the valve adjustment - To Chip

 

Sadly, the valve jobs ended when we had kids.

Ben near Detroit.

From: max_stemple <jasperezra@gmail.com>
Reply-To: <diesel_mercedes@yahoogroups.com>
Date: Sat, 07 Jan 2012 19:23:42 -0000
To: <diesel_mercedes@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: [diesel_mercedes] Re: The right wrench for the valve adjustment - To Chip

 

I know not one woman that would even think about doing a valve job on a Mercedes or any other car. I don't know any ladies or women who do anything to their cars other than drive. I don't think a valve job is all that easy, with all things considered and some major things can be screwed up too. How long have I been adjusting valves on a diesel Mercedes? Since 1976. Also done VW's, Subarus ,Chevy six's, and a bunch of diesel generators, I don't think any of them were easy. Maybe simple after I got the hang of it but still a whole lot going on under there. Don't take this job too lightly, learn to do it carefully. Would I ever pay anyone else to do it? Hell no. Max P.S. dealers have the wrenches too, thats where I got mine back in 76

--- In diesel_mercedes@yahoogroups.com, Trish Dougherty <purrfectharmonyfarm@...> wrote:
>
> On Fri, Jan 6, 2012 at 4:49 PM, Chip <czulli@...> wrote:
>
> > **
> >
> >
> > I'll get them in the mail this weekend Trish.
> >
> > Chip
> > Houston
> >
> > I did stipulate that these wrenches only work for men didn't I? Women and
> > valve adjustments just don't seem to work.
> >
> You are tooo funny! Just how many women do you know that have attempted
> valve adjustments?
>
> Did I really plan to help or was that my ploy to get Kevin to do most of
> the work????
>

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Re: [diesel_mercedes] The right wrench for the valve adjustment

 

Good deal Trish.  I've bought quite a bit from Kent and from Tom Hansen at the MB Classics center over the years.  Both are the bee's knees.  I can't remember where I got wrenches though.  Not from Kent, possibly from that cat on the list here mentioned previously.  They are critical.

Good luck!  

Ben near Detroit

From: Trish Dougherty <purrfectharmonyfarm@wifi45.com>
Reply-To: <diesel_mercedes@yahoogroups.com>
Date: Sat, 7 Jan 2012 15:10:00 -0600
To: <diesel_mercedes@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: Re: [diesel_mercedes] The right wrench for the valve adjustment

 

Ben,

Thanks for the offer, but Chip is sending us his set. He's just down the freeway from us.

I did find them on Kent's site. 

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Re: [diesel_mercedes] Re : Good Parenting

 

Hey Nate,

You're quite the catch Trish . I hope Kevin understands this .

Oh Kevin is well aware of what he's got on his hands! In more ways than one! (Another reason no way were we going down the kid path!)

I think teaching your children as your folks did you , is very important ~ not so they'll grow up to be gearheads but so they'll grow up responsible and realize how life works .

I cherish what my parents taught me. 

Were you raised in Texas ? .

NO!  I'm from Arizona!  I was born in Phx. but spent most of our time in the Sedona or Prescott areas with the exception of one year in New Port Beach for my dad's work as a civil engineer.



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Re: [diesel_mercedes] The right wrench for the valve adjustment

 

Ben,

Thanks for the offer, but Chip is sending us his set. He's just down the freeway from us.

I did find them on Kent's site. 

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Re: [diesel_mercedes] Re : Routine Air Conditioning Service

 

I'm thinking propane...?

Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

From: "Nate" <vwnate1@yahoo.com>
Sender: diesel_mercedes@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sat, 07 Jan 2012 18:54:30 -0000
To: <diesel_mercedes@yahoogroups.com>
ReplyTo: diesel_mercedes@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [diesel_mercedes] Re : Routine Air Conditioning Service

 


Did they use R12 or what ? .

-Nate
Tony Bragged :
>
> AH I love Mexico.
> Took the car in yesterday to have the air conditioning brought up to snuff. They purged the old refrigerant, tested everything, lubed the compressor, recharged the system and now I can make ice cubes - well almost.
> Just great took a trip out to the airport to pick up friends of friends and was able to cool the cabin with the fan on low and the wheel off the max setting.
> Cost 600 pesos or about $46.
> Tony
>

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[diesel_mercedes] Re: The right wrench for the valve adjustment - To Chip

 

I know not one woman that would even think about doing a valve job on a Mercedes or any other car. I don't know any ladies or women who do anything to their cars other than drive. I don't think a valve job is all that easy, with all things considered and some major things can be screwed up too. How long have I been adjusting valves on a diesel Mercedes? Since 1976. Also done VW's, Subarus ,Chevy six's, and a bunch of diesel generators, I don't think any of them were easy. Maybe simple after I got the hang of it but still a whole lot going on under there. Don't take this job too lightly, learn to do it carefully. Would I ever pay anyone else to do it? Hell no. Max P.S. dealers have the wrenches too, thats where I got mine back in 76

--- In diesel_mercedes@yahoogroups.com, Trish Dougherty <purrfectharmonyfarm@...> wrote:
>
> On Fri, Jan 6, 2012 at 4:49 PM, Chip <czulli@...> wrote:
>
> > **
> >
> >
> > I'll get them in the mail this weekend Trish.
> >
> > Chip
> > Houston
> >
> > I did stipulate that these wrenches only work for men didn't I? Women and
> > valve adjustments just don't seem to work.
> >
> You are tooo funny! Just how many women do you know that have attempted
> valve adjustments?
>
> Did I really plan to help or was that my ploy to get Kevin to do most of
> the work????
>

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Re: [diesel_mercedes] Re : Co$t Of Ownership ~ MY View

 

When my 6 kids left home, I had 7 cars left behind (Toyota, Honda, BMW, Dodge Maxi Van, MB w123, Ford Aerostar, and something else). It took a year or two to clear them all out, but I am quite content with only 2 1983 w123 300ds around to take care of. Do the work yourself if possible and when you die, you can use your MB as a coffin, thereby saving yourself additional $$$.
 
brian from laverne, ca
Mary (195K)  Martha (280K)
1983 w123 300d's

From: Nate <vwnate1@yahoo.com>
To: diesel_mercedes@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Saturday, January 7, 2012 10:43 AM
Subject: [diesel_mercedes] Re : Co$t Of Ownership ~ MY View

 

Yes , the jacking points are those round holes along the rocker panels , one way to test is to jack up the car in question ~ if the round metal tube/hole part , raises up and begins to crinkle the metal above it , the car is JUNK ~ worth parts only although you _can_ drive it this way for many years , it's going to be problematic , especially if you have a flat tire .

Cheap Wagons or any other typ of car , are _EASY_to find : just go _LOOK_ at every one you see for sale , when you find one with cosmetic faults ~ auger in like white on rice ~ no one ever buys the ugly cars so if it works O.K. , pitch a fit about every blemish , bald or mis matched tire , replacement stereo (the Beckers are far better than the $3,000 'up grades ')

Many people have NO IDEA what they're doing selling and will jump at cash in hand .

Many Dealers and Independent M-B repair shops will have good used Diesel Wagons they're " going to fix up and sell " (someday) - I know of one like this in Pasadena , I can't get him to give me a price .

VW's ~ old Diesels are a ' converted ' Gasoline engine , they were bad when new , I still don't trust them , both my big brothers had them and loved them .

NEW Beetles have a very good TDI engine but as you mentioned, the rest of the car is weak at best .

I have _only_ old cars and I find that by doing the repairs & maintenance my self , it's *very* cheap indeed .

-Nate
Alan wrote:
>
> Thanks everyone for the welcome and tips. Thanks Rob for that link to the list of engines/models.
>
> > the turbo is a big alloy snail looking thing under the air cleaner on the right side of the engine
>
> Great; that's what I'll look for.
>
> > Also , look closely under the rear side windows , rocker panels and battery tray for any rust holes ~ by the time you see bubbles or pin holes , it's *VERY* serious .
>
> OK, good to know. I also read the jacking points are problem areas. Is that the same thing you are mentioning for the rocker panels, or in addition?
>
> > In closing : BEWARE the ' cheap ' Mercedes ! it will always be the MO$T EXPEN$IVE CAR YOU EVER OWN ! . (but , you'll polly love it anyway , I do)
>
> Well, I'm definitely thinking that over. I certainly believe that a good Mercedes mechanic will be expensive. For those doing their own work, does the adage still hold true?
>
> I've also been reading up on VW diesels. They have a devoted fan base too, but it sure seems from anecdotes that VW reliability in the last decade or two does not live up to their historic reputation. My wife got a big grin when she saw a New Beetle TDI for sale in the paper because she always thought they looked cute, but I'm leery of how many stories I've heard of people having all kinds of expensive problems. Sounds like TDI engine is good, rest of the car is questionable. Seems like people love the cars so much they put up with all the issues. I guess I've been spoiled by my Hondas which have been simple, reliable and cheap to maintain. If diesel Hondas were common in the US I'd pick that in a heartbeat, but no such animal here.
>
> My main candidates I'm mulling over are a Rabbit, Jetta Wagon, or 300TD. You know the saying: good, fast, cheap-- pick any two.
>
> My impressions at this point:
>
> Rabbit- reliable, easy to work on, low purchase price, no turbo=slow accel, good MPG (40+).
>
> Jetta Wagon- good MPG (40+), turbo=fast, higher purchase, reliability and ease of work unsure???
>
> 300TD- low purchase, turbo=decent accel, MPG not as good (20-30), reliability good I think?
>
> I'm going to be hard pressed to find a Jetta Wagon or Golf TDI that I can afford, so it is probably going to come down to the Rabbit versus 300TD. The obvious competition there for me is the high MPG of the Rabbit versus the awesome styling of the Mercedes, which will probably put maintenance/repair as a major deciding factor.
>
> So I'm trying to figure out, is keeping a W123 300TD running in good condition really more EXPEN$IVE than any other 30-year-old car, if I'm doing the wrenching myself?
>
> Thanks for everyone's thoughts and opinions.
>
> - Alan
>



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[diesel_mercedes] Re : Routine Air Conditioning Service

 


Did they use R12 or what ? .

-Nate
Tony Bragged :
>
> AH I love Mexico.
> Took the car in yesterday to have the air conditioning brought up to snuff. They purged the old refrigerant, tested everything, lubed the compressor, recharged the system and now I can make ice cubes - well almost.
> Just great took a trip out to the airport to pick up friends of friends and was able to cool the cabin with the fan on low and the wheel off the max setting.
> Cost 600 pesos or about $46.
> Tony
>

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[diesel_mercedes] Re : Co$t Of Ownership ~ MY View

 


Yes , the jacking points are those round holes along the rocker panels , one way to test is to jack up the car in question ~ if the round metal tube/hole part , raises up and begins to crinkle the metal above it , the car is JUNK ~ worth parts only although you _can_ drive it this way for many years , it's going to be problematic , especially if you have a flat tire .

Cheap Wagons or any other typ of car , are _EASY_to find : just go _LOOK_ at every one you see for sale , when you find one with cosmetic faults ~ auger in like white on rice ~ no one ever buys the ugly cars so if it works O.K. , pitch a fit about every blemish , bald or mis matched tire , replacement stereo (the Beckers are far better than the $3,000 'up grades ')

Many people have NO IDEA what they're doing selling and will jump at cash in hand .

Many Dealers and Independent M-B repair shops will have good used Diesel Wagons they're " going to fix up and sell " (someday) - I know of one like this in Pasadena , I can't get him to give me a price .

VW's ~ old Diesels are a ' converted ' Gasoline engine , they were bad when new , I still don't trust them , both my big brothers had them and loved them .

NEW Beetles have a very good TDI engine but as you mentioned, the rest of the car is weak at best .

I have _only_ old cars and I find that by doing the repairs & maintenance my self , it's *very* cheap indeed .

-Nate
Alan wrote:
>
> Thanks everyone for the welcome and tips. Thanks Rob for that link to the list of engines/models.
>
> > the turbo is a big alloy snail looking thing under the air cleaner on the right side of the engine
>
> Great; that's what I'll look for.
>
> > Also , look closely under the rear side windows , rocker panels and battery tray for any rust holes ~ by the time you see bubbles or pin holes , it's *VERY* serious .
>
> OK, good to know. I also read the jacking points are problem areas. Is that the same thing you are mentioning for the rocker panels, or in addition?
>
> > In closing : BEWARE the ' cheap ' Mercedes ! it will always be the MO$T EXPEN$IVE CAR YOU EVER OWN ! . (but , you'll polly love it anyway , I do)
>
> Well, I'm definitely thinking that over. I certainly believe that a good Mercedes mechanic will be expensive. For those doing their own work, does the adage still hold true?
>
> I've also been reading up on VW diesels. They have a devoted fan base too, but it sure seems from anecdotes that VW reliability in the last decade or two does not live up to their historic reputation. My wife got a big grin when she saw a New Beetle TDI for sale in the paper because she always thought they looked cute, but I'm leery of how many stories I've heard of people having all kinds of expensive problems. Sounds like TDI engine is good, rest of the car is questionable. Seems like people love the cars so much they put up with all the issues. I guess I've been spoiled by my Hondas which have been simple, reliable and cheap to maintain. If diesel Hondas were common in the US I'd pick that in a heartbeat, but no such animal here.
>
> My main candidates I'm mulling over are a Rabbit, Jetta Wagon, or 300TD. You know the saying: good, fast, cheap-- pick any two.
>
> My impressions at this point:
>
> Rabbit- reliable, easy to work on, low purchase price, no turbo=slow accel, good MPG (40+).
>
> Jetta Wagon- good MPG (40+), turbo=fast, higher purchase, reliability and ease of work unsure???
>
> 300TD- low purchase, turbo=decent accel, MPG not as good (20-30), reliability good I think?
>
> I'm going to be hard pressed to find a Jetta Wagon or Golf TDI that I can afford, so it is probably going to come down to the Rabbit versus 300TD. The obvious competition there for me is the high MPG of the Rabbit versus the awesome styling of the Mercedes, which will probably put maintenance/repair as a major deciding factor.
>
> So I'm trying to figure out, is keeping a W123 300TD running in good condition really more EXPEN$IVE than any other 30-year-old car, if I'm doing the wrenching myself?
>
> Thanks for everyone's thoughts and opinions.
>
> - Alan
>

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