My C43 Coupe Build Thread




The meat is tenderized, and the bones are broken into tiny pieces!!You do great work, and some of your mods are tasteful, but...
Let the thing rest in peace in horsey heaven, FCOL!
Last edited by tresean1; Apr 15, 2017 at 09:14 AM.
Thanks-that's very constructive criticism
1. Installed Weistec Downpipes over the weekend and made instructions in another post -since there weren't any. Waiting on stage 2 tune from AMR to start her up.
2. Also, finally installed the 2nd BOV spacer from turbokits.com. The location on the passenger side is just about impossible to reach. I had to take apart the entire front end (remove fluid bottle, removes hoses, belts, and brackets and lower belly pan to get to it. I personally like the sound (its totally subjective and many in this forum don't like it) but overall the level of effort for install wasn't worth it for zero performance gain. The write up on 450.com on how to do this is totally misleading in terms of how easy they make it sound.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
I'd love to check out your car in person sometime.
Brien
Don't redline it to hell right out of the box but just a few hundred miles of varying rpms is perfectly sufficient to then be able to let her loose
Btw, I'm thinking of going GLC/GLE for my next lease. haven't driven one yet but I'm curious. How does it handle? Does it drive like an SUV or is it more nimble and feels like just a tall car?
This myth of slowly breaking in a motor for the first 1000miles is a carryover from very old days when bearings shed material during the first 1000 miles. Metallurgy has changed, especially with a high hp motor, to where you don't need to baby them.
Now, oil change intervals is different. I believe in using a quality dino break in oil for the first 10-15 miles, then switching to a conventional oil for the next 500 miles, then you're free to run synthetic and hammer away at it.
I also test drove the GLE43 (not coupe) and to me it was just too big and heavy. I still like to do spirited drives and though the GLE43 has the AMG suspension, I still felt the body roll and heft when taking the off ramp on my test drive. It also feels and drives like a truck vs. the GLC. If I had the money the wife would have loved for me to get the GLE43 coupe but $90K was a bit much. For the size of the GLE, I think the 63 version more suits that truck for fun.
You can't go wrong with either one but I have a 4 person family (which is really 3 persons since my oldest son's is hardly around) and I don't need the space/cargo room of the GLE. Plus I still have the boy-racer in me and when I am alone in the GLC I like to play around a bit. GLC43 with down-pipes and tune should be a fun truck. Not to mention RennTECH just brought out a lowering module which can manipulate the air-suspension and I can custom lower it to whatever setting I want without having to get coil-overs or springs.
Sorry OP for thread-jacking lol.
I also test drove the GLE43 (not coupe) and to me it was just too big and heavy. I still like to do spirited drives and though the GLE43 has the AMG suspension, I still felt the body roll and heft when taking the off ramp on my test drive. It also feels and drives like a truck vs. the GLC. If I had the money the wife would have loved for me to get the GLE43 coupe but $90K was a bit much. For the size of the GLE, I think the 63 version more suits that truck for fun.
You can't go wrong with either one but I have a 4 person family (which is really 3 persons since my oldest son's is hardly around) and I don't need the space/cargo room of the GLE. Plus I still have the boy-racer in me and when I am alone in the GLC I like to play around a bit. GLC43 with down-pipes and tune should be a fun truck. Not to mention RennTECH just brought out a lowering module which can manipulate the air-suspension and I can custom lower it to whatever setting I want without having to get coil-overs or springs.
Sorry OP for thread-jacking lol.
-Added custom mechanical boost gauge. Had gauge made by speedhut and I made my own boost tap to get vacuum and boost off the manifold. I also custom mounted the gauge into the spot where the center vent was
-Made a custom rear difusor from the factory coupe difuser, to fit quad exhaust tips. The difuser was made by cutting the original difuser and plastic welded and blended so there were no gaps to make it flush. The silver center portion was cut and then resused.
-102mm flowmaster exhaust tips were purchased. I had them welded so that they were staggered. I then polished off the flowmaster logos and painted the exhaust tips with a High heat black paint which has a slight flake in the sunlight. The exhaust tips are mounted straight to the end pipes of the awe track exhaust.





