Good news and bad news.
The bad news is that my cams are starting to show some wear at 69kmi
Drivers side intake cam.
This is the worst lobe, but is very similar to the others.
The profile is still 98% there, but there is pitting evident which means that the cam has worn through the hard face. This is where the MoS2 will help. The platelets will fill those pits to some degree and add some lubricity.
I guess I’ll be putting cams in in the next 10k or so. ****.
Yes you do! (Taps foot impatiently.....)
I have started looking at what the internet has for camshafts out there. I found one company with a tragic name, “WebCams” willing to hard face weld and regrind for eleven or twelve hundred bucks a set. Going to ask for details....
Also going to reach out to schrick to see if they’ve got anything. They’ve got cams for my BBK Audi V8 listed for 3-400 euro each. That’s for new cams with DLC coating. Maybe they can grind something for us too.
Makes me wish my small cylindrical grinder at work had an indexable work spindle, I’d grind them myself.
Concerns me too, I did my best to look for wear on the lifters, and couldn’t see anything chowdered up. I should have stuck my plastic face pry bar in there to depress the lifter from the cam lobe to look underneath a bit better but didn’t think of that until I had it all closed up.
Another side note, the Accusump will need to go in the trunk. There is literally nowhere under the hood where it will fit. I thought I got lucky with the cavernous space above the ECU, but the accumulator is about a half inch too long. And that’s the first time I’ve ever had that problem. (That was a dick joke)
Looks like I have to shell out for 20’ of -8 line from earls.
Between my VW needing a $2000 clutch job and my Mercedes being a Mercedes, this is shaping up to be an expensive year.
I guess I had better get back out on the street corner.




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I’m still learning the Mercedes design “language.” All cars have their own. For example all VAG products have essentially the same type of construction. If you’ve worked on one Audi, the rest make sense.
Most GM products are built like 4th grade Erector set science fair project.
My first impressions with this car are that it is vastly less complex than any Audi. For example, I didn’t need to grow a second elbow and dislocate my shoulder to remove the valve cover like I did on the S4.
I was fishing around the passenger side of the Mercedes for vertical mounting, but the oil cooler is in the way.
Is there any room in the fender between the wheel and the front doors if I took the fender liner out for access?
Ill have to look behind the trans for room.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
Start at the 25min mark if the link below doesn't auto start there.
https://youtu.be/nqb4S6a4OJA?t=1519
Yeah. Pretty much the idea. If the wear is that bad, I’d likely have to weld before milling for the bushing anyway.
But if all it takes is some weld every 100k I can live with that.
Bank 1 (right side) cylinder 4 intake camshaft.
I bet that thing sounds like a small block Chevy with the valvetrain looking like that.




The bad news is that my cams are starting to show some wear at 69kmi
Drivers side intake cam.
This is the worst lobe, but is very similar to the others.
The profile is still 98% there, but there is pitting evident which means that the cam has worn through the hard face. This is where the MoS2 will help. The platelets will fill those pits to some degree and add some lubricity.
I guess I’ll be putting cams in in the next 10k or so. ****.




The bad news is that my cams are starting to show some wear at 69kmi
Drivers side intake cam.
This is the worst lobe, but is very similar to the others.
The profile is still 98% there, but there is pitting evident which means that the cam has worn through the hard face. This is where the MoS2 will help. The platelets will fill those pits to some degree and add some lubricity.
I guess I’ll be putting cams in in the next 10k or so. ****.
I guess the real issue is the cam has a slight angle on the tip of the lobe and that rotates the lifter and gives the nice circles on top of the lifter, once they wear that angle off the cam lobe, then the lifter will stop rotating and the pitting in the cam once worn is like sandpaper and starts to wear a grove into the lifter which eventually will wear through, but it takes a while to happen and you can monitor it and once it starts to wear enough that the lifters stop rotating then it is time to redo the cams and lifters.
Last edited by roadkillrob; Nov 16, 2021 at 09:23 PM.




Can't remember if I used thread locker or not.
I do remember being worried about over tightening and breaking a bolt.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YtxzkJsGGSw
Makes me wonder if I did mine tight enough when I replaced my lifters and did the Tasos pin flip.
Can't remember if I used thread locker or not.
I do remember being worried about over tightening and breaking a bolt.
I was looking closely at that video, it looks like the bolts on that CA are totally missing, which begs the question: where did they go? If they came out on their own, the answer is nowhere good.
I can’t remember if those bolts on the face of the CA are accessible with the solenoid housing bolted up.
At least it’s easy to check.
Loctite is cheap. It’s one of the things I always keep on hand when working with bolts that are labor intensive to get to.








This is all to blame:
New plates
I have some HRC values from the old plates too and was consulting with dkjenis on instagram about making these. The plates above are still yet to be hardened.
Old plates below for reference
As an aside while doing this work I ran into balancing the plates and found out that the camshafts are totally out of balance to begin with. Looking at the intake lobes they are all over the place with the engine’s firing order.
Last edited by go team; Sep 1, 2020 at 01:08 AM.






Chicago style deep dish lifter.