First c63 delivered to the US
My first post to the forum and I'm looking for a specific C63.
I know the first 2008 W204 delivered to the US was delivered Houston, but I have no idea how to go about tracking it down. I'm a massive AMG enthusiast, and it would be the cornerstone of my pending collection. Does anyone know where it is, or the vin associated with it, or even just how to track the car down in general? I have no real rush on finding it, but it is something I would really like to find and purchase in the near future. All help is really appreciated!
why...you should be asking this question for the first CLK63BS as this is the first chassis to receive the M156 engine.
Also, if I was going to spend a couple hundred thousand dollars on a car - specifically on a Mercedes - I would get an SLS, not a CLK63BS.
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What exactly are you looking for?
These cars come in in transport ships, probably a years worth of US allocation at the time.
So the C63 for US probably congregated at Affalterbach, possibly not in free air (although not guaranteed not to), for say a month or two, back in 2007. The arrangements for booking the ship and reserving the space for the cars were made, then tractor tralers came and took these to the ship, say in Hamburg. They all got loaded up and probably 4 weeks later they made the first stop on the East Coast. There many/all of them got unloaded and put in a closed park.
So you're looking for what?
-The first C63 to roll onto the tractor Trailer in Affalterbach? Probably nobody kept track
-The first C63 to roll onto the ship? nobody kept track
-The first C63 to roll off the ship? nobody kept track.
Now, at this point, the Dealers have their orders in with Mercedes and have booked the tractor trailers to bring the cars to their locations.
The tractor trailers get to the closed car park and start loading the cars.
Then they start driving to the Dealers. But the first one that leaves has to stop cause the driver really wants to eat a burger.
Conclusion up to here:
Still nobody kept track of which car rolled onto the tractor trailer first, nor is there a centralized time of arrival database, to show which tractor trailer arrived first at which dealer
Once at the dealers, they need to be prepped, nobody knows who was done first, which C63 was ready to be sold in a showroom? we don't know.
Now somebody buys and registers the car. The registration information is transmitted to the Bank, which owns the financed cars. Did somebody walk in with cash first? then that the bank won't know.
I am not entirely sure which commercial entity owns the cars prior to the dealer buying them. Obviously a subsidiary of the Factory. The first transaction that the car undergoes, is the dealer buying from that subsidiary.
Which dealer bought first? that information may be available from Mercedes, if they want to share it, but even if they bought first, they didn't necessarily find a customer first.
There are of course the people that walked in with cash months before and ordered the car with payment in full by example.
They may have been considered as the first ones to buy a car, so finding out who ordered first may seem like the way.
However, this doesn't mean that they were first to register and drive out.
Here are some additional complications. It's possible that the first cars to start driving would be the dealer demo cars. The procedure is very simple and once the car is at the dealer, the demos start to drive.
Who's demo drove first? We won't know.
Which C63 drove in US first? probably the factory development mules. These come with manufacturer plates and always end bad, meaning in a crash test.
Then there is the matter of the press cars. The process of how those get on the street is not well understood and they have a hard life obviously. It may be possible to single out which press car was the first. The thing with those is that sometimes they have a particular tune, because the manufacturer knows that the magazines are going to instrument test them.
Sometimes they do end up sold.
But it's not necessary that if a press car was relatively early on the road, it was delivered first. By the time the magazines are done with it, the other cars may very well start selling.
I just don't want you to walk into a dealership asking "do you have the first C63 delivered?' and them answering ".... I have it right here!..." It may even be somewhat true considering all of the above.
Oh and if you're looking for the first C63 to be completely assembled (it doesn't roll of the assembly line), it was probably not a US model, so you can't have it. Furthermore, I would not be surprised if AMG deems it an important car and keeps it.
If you're looking for the first US spec C63 completed, I would venture a guess that Mercedes of North America would know where it is and they may have it. It may never have been delivered or registered.
The best place to find out is on the Private Lounge chat session, in about 1.5 hours. I think they may answer this question.
Last edited by Vladds; Nov 29, 2017 at 07:26 PM.
What exactly are you looking for?
These cars come in in transport ships, probably a years worth of US allocation at the time.
So the C63 for US probably congregated at Affalterbach, possibly not in free air (although not guaranteed not to), for say a month or two, back in 2007. The arrangements for booking the ship and reserving the space for the cars were made, then tractor tralers came and took these to the ship, say in Hamburg. They all got loaded up and probably 4 weeks later they made the first stop on the East Coast. There many/all of them got unloaded and put in a closed park.
So you're looking for what?
-The first C63 to roll onto the tractor Trailer in Affalterbach? Probably nobody kept track
-The first C63 to roll onto the ship? nobody kept track
-The first C63 to roll off the ship? nobody kept track.
Now, at this point, the Dealers have their orders in with Mercedes and have booked the tractor trailers to bring the cars to their locations.
The tractor trailers get to the closed car park and start loading the cars.
Then they start driving to the Dealers. But the first one that leaves has to stop cause the driver really wants to eat a burger.
Conclusion up to here:
Still nobody kept track of which car rolled onto the tractor trailer first, nor is there a centralized time of arrival database, to show which tractor trailer arrived first at which dealer
Once at the dealers, they need to be prepped, nobody knows who was done first, which C63 was ready to be sold in a showroom? we don't know.
Now somebody buys and registers the car. The registration information is transmitted to the Bank, which owns the financed cars. Did somebody walk in with cash first? then that the bank won't know.
I am not entirely sure which commercial entity owns the cars prior to the dealer buying them. Obviously a subsidiary of the Factory. The first transaction that the car undergoes, is the dealer buying from that subsidiary.
Which dealer bought first? that information may be available from Mercedes, if they want to share it, but even if they bought first, they didn't necessarily find a customer first.
There are of course the people that walked in with cash months before and ordered the car with payment in full by example.
They may have been considered as the first ones to buy a car, so finding out who ordered first may seem like the way.
However, this doesn't mean that they were first to register and drive out.
Here are some additional complications. It's possible that the first cars to start driving would be the dealer demo cars. The procedure is very simple and once the car is at the dealer, the demos start to drive.
Who's demo drove first? We won't know.
Which C63 drove in US first? probably the factory development mules. These come with manufacturer plates and always end bad, meaning in a crash test.
Then there is the matter of the press cars. The process of how those get on the street is not well understood and they have a hard life obviously. It may be possible to single out which press car was the first. The thing with those is that sometimes they have a particular tune, because the manufacturer knows that the magazines are going to instrument test them.
Sometimes they do end up sold.
But it's not necessary that if a press car was relatively early on the road, it was delivered first. By the time the magazines are done with it, the other cars may very well start selling.
I just don't want you to walk into a dealership asking "do you have the first C63 delivered?' and them answering ".... I have it right here!..." It may even be somewhat true considering all of the above.
Oh and if you're looking for the first C63 to be completely assembled (it doesn't roll of the assembly line), it was probably not a US model, so you can't have it. Furthermore, I would not be surprised if AMG deems it an important car and keeps it.
If you're looking for the first US spec C63 completed, I would venture a guess that Mercedes of North America would know where it is and they may have it. It may never have been delivered or registered.
The best place to find out is on the Private Lounge chat session, in about 1.5 hours. I think they may answer this question.
How so many factors contribute to randomize the first delivery, to the point where there would be no way to track who is first. Remember, Mercedes already sold the cars to the dealers at that point, they only care about the warranty, not about registration or insurance.
I bought my car on a Sunday. The Registration info would not come to the DMV until Monday. And when it comes from the dealer to DMV, it comes in batches "cars sold Sunday", nobody there knows what time.
Mercedes gets the warranty information from the dealer in batches too.
The only accurate by the hour, even day, is the insurance, but nobody centralizes those at Mercedes of North America.
And so on.....
And because NOBODY manned the delivery stopwatch, ALL will claim that theirs is first, who will disprove it and based on what?
You're not fighting a winning cause .....
Last edited by Vladds; Nov 30, 2017 at 07:31 AM.
that's the jist of it. nobody here can help you.













