W211 as we approach 2025
I'm planning on maintenance items like motor mounts, spark plugs and wires, resealing valve covers, fluids (transmission, antifreeze), weatherstripping, power steering reservoir and flush, maybe brake flush, etc. Nothing is broken at the moment but there's always Airmatic (my fronts are older, but rears and compressor are relatively new) and the extended SBC warranty expiring in 2-3 years hanging over my head as well. I also have a minor rear main seal leak which I understand can be common on these at higher mileage so I'm obviously hoping that doesn't get worse any time soon and require attention (because I'm not DIYing a rear main seal). In my case this Benz is a 3rd / spare vehicle so it can be down in the garage for projects as needed, or just sold off. It sure rides nice as is (even considering that the mounts are worn), and is in clean condition inside and out, was maintained pretty well by the PO with original parts.
Anyways kind of a weird thread that I'm sure is different for everyone based on individual circumstances. What's everyone else's expectations and short term and long term plan in 2025 for these vehicles?




If the car passes a good, pre-purchase inspection and has extensive, solid service documentation, life (and wallet) will be profoundlly happier.
If the car has sparce documentation, pass on it.
If the car passes a good, pre-purchase inspection and has extensive, solid service documentation, life (and wallet) will be profoundlly happier.
If the car has sparce documentation, pass on it.
But we are still talking a 20 year old Mercedes with 170k. Hence my question is it crazy to DIY a round of maintenance items as mentioned in the OP to keep this puppy going for hopefully years to come? Or are these vehicles at the point where you leave it alone and just ride it as-is till something big breaks, then move on?
On a Toyota I wouldn't need to ask this question. But I'm a little new to this specific game - this is my first used old Mercedes.
Last edited by mooseman; Nov 23, 2024 at 02:14 PM.
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On the other hand, the wagons (according to the Mercedes-Benz Corporate Archive, a total of 4,523 wagons were built from the production start-up pre-production series in 12/2002 until end of production in 5/2006, and I've seen estimates that between 1,000 to 1,300 units were shipped to the U.S., which is subject to verification), depending on condition and spec, are a bit better in that regard, and somewhat lower-mileage, nice examples (and not even rare editions...) have been selling for stupid money in recent years on enthusiast auctions like BaT (I can't believe how many people are willing to shell-out amounts in the mid-20,000 to low-30,000 U.S. dollar range for these E 500 wagons...), Mecum (an '04 I wanted went for 23,000 U.S. dollars last year...and it had nearly 70,000 miles on the odometer and required rebuilding its suspension...), and other classic car auctions that I have tracked. Heck, after my accident in August of 2022 in which my late dad's old, trusty and rusty '03 C240 4MATIC wagon (he bought it new from the local dealership, and it was his and my mom's ultra-reliable daily driver) with nearly 210,000 miles was totaled in a head-on collision with an elderly driver who had a heart attack while entering the highway, the insurance company cut my mom a check for over 9,000 U.S. dollars for it...
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On the other hand, the wagons (according to the Mercedes-Benz Corporate Archive, a total of 4,523 wagons were built from the production start-up pre-production series in 12/2002 until end of production in 5/2006, and I've seen estimates that between 1,000 to 1,300 units were shipped to the U.S., which is subject to verification), depending on condition and spec, are a bit better in that regard, and somewhat lower-mileage, nice examples (and not even rare editions...) have been selling for stupid money in recent years on enthusiast auctions like BaT (I can't believe how many people are willing to shell-out amounts in the mid-20,000 to low-30,000 U.S. dollar range for these E 500 wagons...), Mecum (an '04 I wanted went for 23,000 U.S. dollars last year...and it had nearly 70,000 miles on the odometer and required rebuilding its suspension...), and other classic car auctions that I have tracked. Heck, after my accident in August of 2022 in which my late dad's old, trusty and rusty '03 C240 4MATIC wagon (he bought it new from the local dealership, and it was his and my mom's ultra-reliable daily driver) with nearly 210,000 miles was totaled in a head-on collision with an elderly driver who had a heart attack while entering the highway, the insurance company cut my mom a check for over 9,000 U.S. dollars for it...
Anyways, I'm not too concerned with the vehicle having or holding value or being desired by an enthusiast. There wasn't much value to it when I bought it, so really there's not much value to hold onto. Worst case I sell it and I'm out a couple thousand bucks. I'll survive.
I bought it as a spare beater to keep some local miles off my large SUV and want to know if DIYing some basic maintenance for the cost of parts (plugs, resealing leaky valve covers, maybe mounts, some fluids, etc) worth it? Can these last 200k+ miles? Or should I not even bother with these basic maintenance tasks and just YOLO it as is.
Last edited by mooseman; Nov 23, 2024 at 06:57 PM.














