Red Index Stripe




If you are planning to do this, I have some tips from experience that might help. It's not rocket surgery!
Last edited by ghgoldberg; May 5, 2025 at 01:36 PM.
If you are planning to do this, I have some tips from experience that might help. It's not rocket surgery!




But the W206 C 43 no longer gets it.
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Basically they removed it for some reason.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
I agree the marker looks really nice and I almost got the carbon fiber steering wheel because of it, but I thought it didn't match the overall spec of my car.
I agree the marker looks really nice and I almost got the carbon fiber steering wheel because of it, but I thought it didn't match the overall spec of my car.




If you are planning to do this, I have some tips from experience that might help. It's not rocket surgery!




2. Clean the top of the wheel with a quick wipe of isopropyl alcohol.
3. Tape a thread from the bottom of the wheel, thru the center of the wheel, and around the top of the wheel. Verify that it is centered. (Easy to do with Mercedes!)
4. Dab a teeny tiny (pardon the technical jargon) of superglue on the threads about +/- 1/2" (12 mm) each side of the line.
5. Cut a foot or two of Mitchell's abrasive cord. (You can substitute a fine triangular jewelers file, or if you pm me your address, I send ya a few feet of Mitchell's.)
6. File a groove in the leather +/- 1/8" (say 3-4 mm) from the line all around. Don't worry about the bottom where the threads are. My grooves taper off there, anyhow the superglue will prevnt the threads from unraveling in any event. Lightly scuff between the grooves with 400 sandpaper.
7. Mask outboard of each groove.
8. With an artist's brush, apply a couple of coats of red rustoleum. I have used rustoleum in the past to good effect. (I didn't here, and wish that I had. Rustoleum is slow drying so it dries nice and smooth. I thought that I would apply the "right" material this time, so I got some leather paint, but it is fast drying so requires several coats with sanding in between to get it smooth.)
9. Optionally, you can apply a thin coat of clear or black in the grooves.
2. Clean the top of the wheel with a quick wipe of isopropyl alcohol.
3. Tape a thread from the bottom of the wheel, thru the center of the wheel, and around the top of the wheel. Verify that it is centered. (Easy to do with Mercedes!)
4. Dab a teeny tiny (pardon the technical jargon) of superglue on the threads about +/- 1/2" (12 mm) each side of the line.
5. Cut a foot or two of Mitchell's abrasive cord. (You can substitute a fine triangular jewelers file, or if you pm me your address, I send ya a few feet of Mitchell's.)
6. File a groove in the leather +/- 1/8" (say 3-4 mm) from the line all around. Don't worry about the bottom where the threads are. My grooves taper off there, anyhow the superglue will prevnt the threads from unraveling in any event. Lightly scuff between the grooves with 400 sandpaper.
7. Mask outboard of each groove.
8. With an artist's brush, apply a couple of coats of red rustoleum. I have used rustoleum in the past to good effect. (I didn't here, and wish that I had. Rustoleum is slow drying so it dries nice and smooth. I thought that I would apply the "right" material this time, so I got some leather paint, but it is fast drying so requires several coats with sanding in between to get it smooth.)
9. Optionally, you can apply a thin coat of clear or black in the grooves.




