Need paint on 1984 300D
I know I need to do something about the paint. It fades more every year. I am worried that shortly after paying between $6,000 and $7,000 to paint the car, something could go wrong that will make me regret having it painted. I appreciate simply having a chance to post my concern and welcome any insight other Mercedes owners may have.
300D
Rear windshield
Behind rear tire
I agree welded metal would be better. I really have been putting off painting the car far too long. Every year or so some mechanical issue (power steering/fuel tank/axel) will happen and I will just be glad the car is safe to drive.
I know I need to do something about the paint. It fades more every year. I am worried that shortly after paying between $6,000 and $7,000 to paint the car, something could go wrong that will make me regret having it painted. I appreciate simply having a chance to post my concern and welcome any insight other Mercedes owners may have.
You will get many opinions on this but I will now give you my experience. Welding in new panels will just speed up the rusting process. Guaranteed unless it is done to an extremely high level . Remove all loose rust and apply several coats of Miracle paint to all rusty areas and extend it into good metal. Where necessary use fiberglass cloth in various thicknesses to reinforce along with miracle paint. You end up with a repair almost as strong as epoxy fiberglass. You apply the miracle paint to all rusty areas like inside the doors , in the trunk and on the floor pans, battery trays, fenders etc. My floors in my 300D had rusty gaps as wide as 2 " and are now solid. Some of the new paints like single stage polyurethanes are great and don't need a clear coat. 3 qts will do a whole car and they are $65-80 a qt. The prep is what is important and there are all those moldlings and areas to tape off. It is best to sand to bare metal and then apply over epoxy primer but it is possible to sand thru the clear coat just barely into the base coat and get adhesion for the polyurethane to existing paint. Bare metal will need primer of course.. I practiced on some of my dented junkyard parts and they turned out fine. The labor is where the cost lies. If you want a perfect showroom finish remember perfect is the enemy of the good. When you are working with rusty 35-40 yr old cars it's silly to blow huge sums on cars which have old components and I bet you have a helluva lot of rust in places you haven't seen yet. At some point cut your losses, do a quick detail and find one from rust free regions. If you have perfect mechanicals you might want to keep it for a parts car. I generally walk away from rusty MB cars, too much work and cost.
300D
Rear windshield
Behind rear tire
You will get many opinions on this but I will now give you my experience. Welding in new panels will just speed up the rusting process. Guaranteed unless it is done to an extremely high level . Remove all loose rust and apply several coats of Miracle paint to all rusty areas and extend it into good metal. Where necessary use fiberglass cloth in various thicknesses to reinforce along with miracle paint. You end up with a repair almost as strong as epoxy fiberglass. You apply the miracle paint to all rusty areas like inside the doors , in the trunk and on the floor pans, battery trays, fenders etc. My floors in my 300D had rusty gaps as wide as 2 " and are now solid. Some of the new paints like single stage polyurethanes are great and don't need a clear coat. 3 qts will do a whole car and they are $65-80 a qt. The prep is what is important and there are all those moldlings and areas to tape off. It is best to sand to bare metal and then apply over epoxy primer but it is possible to sand thru the clear coat just barely into the base coat and get adhesion for the polyurethane to existing paint. Bare metal will need primer of course.. I practiced on some of my dented junkyard parts and they turned out fine. The labor is where the cost lies. If you want a perfect showroom finish remember perfect is the enemy of the good. When you are working with rusty 35-40 yr old cars it's silly to blow huge sums on cars which have old components and I bet you have a helluva lot of rust in places you haven't seen yet. At some point cut your losses, do a quick detail and find one from rust free regions. If you have perfect mechanicals you might want to keep it for a parts car. I generally walk away from rusty MB cars, too much work and cost.




