2011 E550 - Starter + Coil Issue WTF
She drove off the other evening heading to class she teaches about 5 miles away. She calls me and says the engine suddenly started running rough and a light, probably CEL, is flashing intermittently. She says she's halfway there and opts to continue rather than return. Once she arrives the car dies in the parking lot and won't even crank.
I called the dealer and head over to meet the tow truck. Both the tow driver and I smell a burning odor emanating from the passenger side engine but cannot see anything. Car indeed does not crank.
Dealer calls today to say the #1 cylinder "misfired" and shorted and burned the coil pack, hence the burn smell. Repair is $582. When asked what caused this, the reply is "misfires can happen randomly". Plugs were replaced at the last service in April btw.
As for engine no-crank, dealer says starter is gone and quotes $1500 to replace with a reman unit. Apparently not related to the misfire/coil pack issue.
They also recommend "fuel injector cleaning" for an additional $183.
Total cost to fix is $2165.
My gut is screaming BS; it just seems odd these two issues popped up simultaneously. I of course could have it towed elsewhere for a 2nd opinion in that we can get along just fine with my truck as our only vehicle.
What do you think? Bite the bullet and fix it or go elsewhere? The car has been great to this point, never any issues save for a repair to the air suspension under warranty when 6 months old. We plan on keeping it for a while longer. I just dont know that I trust our dealer any longer.
Coil packs can randomly go out, I've had that happen. But sometimes it's the connector boot that shorts out, causing the misfire.
I agree that's a lot of coincidence but from this perspective I can't say either way about the starter. I wonder if a starter wire got shorted out for some reason and then killed the starter. The car dying seems a bit odd - most engines will continue to run (roughly) if one coil pack is disconnected.
That's a lot of money for one coil pack and rebuilt starter replacement. Are you able to DIY the work or maybe you don't want to mess with it. In that case you're indeed stuck at the dealer or as you said get it towed to another shop. But then theres 2 tow costs plus whatever the second shop comes up with. Of course you want that indy shop to be qualified to work on your car. I don't have a 550 so I don't know difficulty of starter replacement. But my own view is I'm also suspicious of the circumstances from your description and the proposed fixes.
Last edited by Mud; Nov 17, 2018 at 10:02 AM.




She drove off the other evening heading to class she teaches about 5 miles away. She calls me and says the engine suddenly started running rough and a light, probably CEL, is flashing intermittently. She says she's halfway there and opts to continue rather than return. Once she arrives the car dies in the parking lot and won't even crank.
I called the dealer and head over to meet the tow truck. Both the tow driver and I smell a burning odor emanating from the passenger side engine but cannot see anything. Car indeed does not crank.
Dealer calls today to say the #1 cylinder "misfired" and shorted and burned the coil pack, hence the burn smell. Repair is $582. When asked what caused this, the reply is "misfires can happen randomly". Plugs were replaced at the last service in April btw.
As for engine no-crank, dealer says starter is gone and quotes $1500 to replace with a reman unit. Apparently not related to the misfire/coil pack issue.
They also recommend "fuel injector cleaning" for an additional $183.
Total cost to fix is $2165.
My gut is screaming BS; it just seems odd these two issues popped up simultaneously. I of course could have it towed elsewhere for a 2nd opinion in that we can get along just fine with my truck as our only vehicle.
What do you think? Bite the bullet and fix it or go elsewhere? The car has been great to this point, never any issues save for a repair to the air suspension under warranty when 6 months old. We plan on keeping it for a while longer. I just dont know that I trust our dealer any longer.
This job is way over priced just like spark plug change. Looking under the hood can look very intimidating for people who are not that hands-on but after that air box is removed it is all there. I changed spark plugs and for that, of course, had to remove each coil pack.
For the starter I think some of the exhaust piping has to be removed for access to the starter so this will be time consuming. I asked for a starter quote once and it was $650 for the part so with probably 5 hours of labor that starter job may not be that badly priced and for an indy to do it they would still charge nearly same hourly rate and the part will probably be from MB.
I would do the coil pack myself and leave the starter job for the dealer.
Update:
Looked at three parts sites konigstiger listed in another post. For my car, which is a 2010 E550, the ignition coil pack goes for $53 at parts.com, $54 at MBdirect and $30 at FCP Euro. At the dealer it probably is around $100. The dealer charging $582 for the coil pack change is absolute rip off if it indeed is just the coil pack change.
Your car is 2011 model but I think it is exactly the same engine as mine in the 2010 model.
Last edited by Arrie; Nov 17, 2018 at 11:35 AM.




Trending Topics
I'm with ya Arrie on the repair cost vs new. We tend to keep our cars for 10 - 15 years. If this is the only hiccup that's not too bad. Time will tell.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG

I wonder if the short killed the battery somehow and that's why it doesn't crank. Maybe have them change the coil pack and check the charging system to make sure it's fine before replacing the starter if there's no crank.
I wonder if the short killed the battery somehow and that's why it doesn't crank. Maybe have them change the coil pack and check the charging system to make sure it's fine before replacing the starter if there's no crank.





