I can’t sell it




love this w212! And may it long live! I hope one day to see MB return to more angular designs with sharp edges and character lines.
I do agree with the classic design of the 2010 E Class and that is one reason why I still have mine.




I do agree with the classic design of the 2010 E Class and that is one reason why I still have mine.
But the master of the merger of equals was always Daimler. Here is an excerpt from recent article about the SLR





I do agree with the classic design of the 2010 E Class and that is one reason why I still have mine.
I believe the 212 was their “statement” car to say that cross pollination era was truly dead and gone, from the way the muffler hanger was installed to the radio buttons. I believe the 212 was as close to the old school way of slow (and expensive) build to get it as close to perfect as they could, and could expect to last with normal routine service for at least a decade or two and several hundred thousand miles. Totally perfect? No. But when you realize nothing man made ever has been, or ever will be totally perfect, then I’d say the 212 is about as close to it as just about any other Mercedes Benz built in the last 40 years. From looks to execution, to ownership enjoyment.
Now before the Lexus crowd shows up, I have had two (LS400 and GS430). My 212 is now 9 years old, and no signs of suspension bushing problems. On my past two Lexus vehicles, I was replacing rear carrier arms, upper control arms, and ball joints long before they hit 9 years of age, and each at about the same milage I have on the 212 today (75k). Maybe I was cursed, but I saw the cracks and degrading rubber of those Lexus bushings with my own two eyes.




The Best of Mercedes & AMG




Given how expensive everything is, when I get that itch for a GLC, which I really do like, I am reminded that I get to enjoy the 212 for $0, and I don't enjoy the GLC enough to buy it in addition to keeping the 212.
It's funny, I am far more protective of the 212 that is probably worth $15k at best now, than I am of the GLS that is probably worth $55k at this point. Hail storm? Take the GLS, but leave the 212 in the garage. I'm pretty sure if I hit a squirrel in the 212 at this point, insurance would rather just total it out instead of repair it, which is exactly what I don't want to happen. Eventually I'll either replace the 212 or just buy another car to complement it and keep it (likely), but sure is nice to not have to fuss with any of that right now while we're in this economic mess.




Unlike most of owners, my cars sit in garage, when the crap goes to the cargo trailer, I am using as a storage.
My W212 zooming on 10 years still look like new and beside few chips and 1 scratch (touched up) on front bumper you will not tell it from new.
I am on the market for white front bumper, to make it perfect again.
My driver seat shows single wear, but I found new cover on ebay for $40.
Car has close to 160,000 miles.




Given how expensive everything is, when I get that itch for a GLC, which I really do like, I am reminded that I get to enjoy the 212 for $0, and I don't enjoy the GLC enough to buy it in addition to keeping the 212.
It's funny, I am far more protective of the 212 that is probably worth $15k at best now, than I am of the GLS that is probably worth $55k at this point. Hail storm? Take the GLS, but leave the 212 in the garage. I'm pretty sure if I hit a squirrel in the 212 at this point, insurance would rather just total it out instead of repair it, which is exactly what I don't want to happen. Eventually I'll either replace the 212 or just buy another car to complement it and keep it (likely), but sure is nice to not have to fuss with any of that right now while we're in this economic mess.
Last edited by MBNUT1; Aug 21, 2023 at 03:41 PM.




While all had that new (to me) car appeal, and certainly enjoyed all of them, every time I got back into mine to leave, I just couldn't do it. I knew I would regret it. And now I know why. It’s the real wood, easy to live with size, and honestly, not a bunch of tech in my face. It’s like the car talks to me and says “I will haunt you”.
I really do think in 20 years, I’ll see some kid who inherited his dad’s w212 sitting at a stoplight, looking nice and shiny and well loved, and say “man that was one of the best they ever built”.
My wife is happy with my decision too. As she says, why fix a $5k problem with a $50k solution? Not that I have a $5k problem, I don’t, but you get the idea… and she wants the Porsche!




Unlike most of owners, my cars sit in garage, when the crap goes to the cargo trailer, I am using as a storage.
My W212 zooming on 10 years still look like new and beside few chips and 1 scratch (touched up) on front bumper you will not tell it from new.
I am on the market for white front bumper, to make it perfect again.
My driver seat shows single wear, but I found new cover on ebay for $40.
Car has close to 160,000 miles.
Between that and repainting the front bumper after years of being pelted by pebbles and road salt, I want to freshen her up!




I did drive a GLS580 recently just to see how it felt and it was just way too much car and not sporty enough compared to my E-class. Very luxurious, beautiful car but too big for my tastes considering we have another 7-seater already.




Between that and repainting the front bumper after years of being pelted by pebbles and road salt, I want to freshen her up!
It is still on my shelf, but visual inspection proves good quality.
I could repair stiches on my old cover, but even after 11 years the vinyl still looks good, for the price I figure out the car deserve new.




It is still on my shelf, but visual inspection proves good quality.
I could repair stiches on my old cover, but even after 11 years the vinyl still looks good, for the price I figure out the car deserve new.
My mechanic specializes in Mercedes restorations, and he said that it wasn't worth it to replace the seat cover because it's a design flaw underneath (he had already tried to fix a few by restitching to no avail), not with the seat cover itself. So he said if it gets really bad to talk to him about it, but I'm a little afraid of what the price will be for him to fix it! Would like to try it myself if there are instructions for replacing the seat cushion cover only.




Remove the seat, line up good bench, or table with some cloths or carpet, put the seat upside down and put your weight on it.
You might have some screws in the corners, but covers has interlocked edges, who stay locked with the tension, so once you press it, it is just pulling them out.
Seat removal will probably take more time than cover replacement.




My mechanic specializes in Mercedes restorations, and he said that it wasn't worth it to replace the seat cover because it's a design flaw underneath (he had already tried to fix a few by restitching to no avail), not with the seat cover itself. So he said if it gets really bad to talk to him about it, but I'm a little afraid of what the price will be for him to fix it! Would like to try it myself if there are instructions for replacing the seat cushion cover only.
Your mechanic is correct, the flaw is too little spring support in the frame itself. You sink too far down and it stretches the material. Look up in this section of the board “Seat Pain” created by me back in 2017 when I bought mine. Go toward the last ¾ of the threads to the photos for how to easily fix the flaw (and make it a billion times more comfortable in general). It’s the springs. You’ll see it. Mine was perfect ever since, as my passenger side that I did not mess with split last fall from my 15 year old track star son sitting in it too much.
that being said, and my comments for the reason of starting this thread - I did sell the car recently. I was reluctant to give such a nice and powerful vehicle to a soon to be 16 year old as his first car. It just didn't sit right by me nor mom. So I traded it at 73k miles for a 2014 VW Tiquan SEL with 40k miles instead and giving it to our son who turns 16 over Memorial Day. Ultimately I will replace the 212 with a custom ordered Ford Bronco Outerbanks with all the trimmings (minus the massive wheels, will chage tires instead). I should have that vehicle around May 15th (ordered Dec 26). I tried to stay with MB, but not a fan of the direction they’re going in terms if interior quality and all of these tech glitches here and there. Thought I wanted the new GLC, until a loaner of the same year went spaz on me in a parking lot and fried itself out. I turned 50 recently, never had a convertible or a Jeep, didnt like the Jeep, but loved the 2.7 twin turbo V6 and driving/ride of the Bronco. Yes, total mid-life crisis purchase, it’s like a real life Tonka Truck from my childhood, but you only live once and there is more behind me than in front of me now, so screw it and do what makes you happy!!
i enjoyed the 212, loved it, and do miss it. However mine was starting to get electrical ghosts in the machine around the pre-safe function, and about 99% positive the front diff was going out if not damaged by one too many pothole hits over the years..




that being said, and my comments for the reason of starting this thread - I did sell the car recently. I was reluctant to give such a nice and powerful vehicle to a soon to be 16 year old as his first car. It just didn't sit right by me nor mom. So I traded it at 73k miles for a 2014 VW Tiquan SEL with 40k miles instead and giving it to our son who turns 16 over Memorial Day. Ultimately I will replace the 212 with a custom ordered Ford Bronco Outerbanks with all the trimmings (minus the massive wheels, will chage tires instead). I should have that vehicle around May 15th (ordered Dec 26). I tried to stay with MB, but not a fan of the direction they’re going in terms if interior quality and all of these tech glitches here and there. Thought I wanted the new GLC, until a loaner of the same year went spaz on me in a parking lot and fried itself out. I turned 50 recently, never had a convertible or a Jeep, didnt like the Jeep, but loved the 2.7 twin turbo V6 and driving/ride of the Bronco. Yes, total mid-life crisis purchase, it’s like a real life Tonka Truck from my childhood, but you only live once and there is more behind me than in front of me now, so screw it and do what makes you happy!!
i enjoyed the 212, loved it, and do miss it. However mine was starting to get electrical ghosts in the machine around the pre-safe function, and about 99% positive the front diff was going out if not damaged by one too many pothole hits over the years..








I loved my 212, thought it was the last of the old way attempt by MB to remind the automotive world of their pre-chrysler roots. Felt that way. Drove that way. Looked that way. Sadly I believe those days are gone for awhile. They'll be back though once the market reacts enough that it shows in the financial results. I'm just one buyer who had $90k to spend on his next car. I've been a fan of MB since day one, warts and all, simply because of the way it drove and made me feel driving it. I went to MB first for my search, started with the E450. Whacked my head badly getting into it. Realized I want an SUV instead, tired of crawling in/out. Already have the GLS in my garage, so the GLE was a waste of money to consider. Left me with the GLC and GLB, or a previous generation GLE (which actually was my preference). New GLC and GLB didn't give me that feeling that I had grown accustomed to with the 212. Just felt like all of the other cars out there. Went to Audi on the SQ5 due to two friends having and loving them. Great car, can't talk bad about it. But having 3 GTI's back-to-back-to-back as well, it just didn't sit well for the cost. I'm not a BMW fan, and too many X5's in my little pocket of the universe. They're friggn' everywhere where I live. Felt like I was just one of the masses in over-leverage suburb-land. Nah. Really struggled badly to find a replacement that I liked as much as the 212 for several months. Then the Bronco hit me from my blind spot. Immediately loved it. It had that feeling. Had to give it a try. Every manufacture usually gets that "lightening in a bottle" car once a decade. They've all had their fair share (I think the 212 is MB's). I think the Bronco is Ford's. My first Ford, and only my second American vehicle in my life. So we'll see how it goes. Back up plan, previous generation GLE and give the Indi $10k to make it new again, and a Mini Cooper toy for fun. All-in would still be less than the Bronco.
Key reasons why I decided against giving my 212 to my son:
1) The car wants to do one thing - cruise at 140mph all day long. I'm 50 and it was tempting every time to do it. Thinking back when I was 16, I would've done it multiple times. Thankfully he's smarter than I was, but still an invincible teenage boy.
2) Low slung front in an SUV world. God forbid the unthinkable were to happen, anything other than a sports car will likely be on top of the 212. It can handle it, videos of then flipping on the autobahn at 130mph and walking away made me buy it myself. But still.
3) Just not the right car for him. It's "dad's car".
4) He would not be comfortable owning it after seeing how much effort I put into keeping it up. The weekends clay bar detailing it, the no expenses spared repairs, how much I adored it. He would be more worried about damaging it than enjoying his first car. I didn't want that for him.
It was costing me around $4k a year to keep up in tip-top shape now. Bearings, bushings, PCV, cam magnets, etc. Nothing simple to fix, and the latest glitch with the pre-safe and an estimate from $800 to $8,000 to find and fix the issue, along with the mysterious highway droning sound at 65-70 that I was positive was the front diff going bad (as was my Indi by that point), I was done. Time for someone else. Whomever bought it got a good one, and if they can fix those two issues, will be back to world-class for a very long time. Only had around 72k miles on it.
Last edited by nc211; Mar 27, 2024 at 06:43 PM.





I loved my 212, thought it was the last of the old way attempt by MB to remind the automotive world of their pre-chrysler roots. Felt that way. Drove that way. Looked that way. Sadly I believe those days are gone for awhile. They'll be back though once the market reacts enough that it shows in the financial results. I'm just one buyer who had $90k to spend on his next car. I've been a fan of MB since day one, warts and all, simply because of the way it drove and made me feel driving it. I went to MB first for my search, started with the E450. Whacked my head badly getting into it. Realized I want an SUV instead, tired of crawling in/out. Already have the GLS in my garage, so the GLE was a waste of money to consider. Left me with the GLC and GLB, or a previous generation GLE (which actually was my preference). New GLC and GLB didn't give me that feeling that I had grown accustomed to with the 212. Just felt like all of the other cars out there. Went to Audi on the SQ5 due to two friends having and loving them. Great car, can't talk bad about it. But having 3 GTI's back-to-back-to-back as well, it just didn't sit well for the cost. I'm not a BMW fan, and too many X5's in my little pocket of the universe. They're friggn' everywhere where I live. Felt like I was just one of the masses in over-leverage suburb-land. Nah. Really struggled badly to find a replacement that I liked as much as the 212 for several months. Then the Bronco hit me from my blind spot. Immediately loved it. It had that feeling. Had to give it a try. Every manufacture usually gets that "lightening in a bottle" car once a decade. They've all had their fair share (I think the 212 is MB's). I think the Bronco is Ford's. My first Ford, and only my second American vehicle in my life. So we'll see how it goes. Back up plan, previous generation GLE and give the Indi $10k to make it new again, and a Mini Cooper toy for fun. All-in would still be less than the Bronco.
Key reasons why I decided against giving my 212 to my son:
1) The car wants to do one thing - cruise at 140mph all day long. I'm 50 and it was tempting every time to do it. Thinking back when I was 16, I would've done it multiple times. Thankfully he's smarter than I was, but still an invincible teenage boy.
2) Low slung front in an SUV world. God forbid the unthinkable were to happen, anything other than a sports car will likely be on top of the 212. It can handle it, videos of then flipping on the autobahn at 130mph and walking away made me buy it myself. But still.
3) Just not the right car for him. It's "dad's car".
4) He would not be comfortable owning it after seeing how much effort I put into keeping it up. The weekends clay bar detailing it, the no expenses spared repairs, how much I adored it. He would be more worried about damaging it than enjoying his first car. I didn't want that for him.
It was costing me around $4k a year to keep up in tip-top shape now. Bearings, bushings, PCV, cam magnets, etc. Nothing simple to fix, and the latest glitch with the pre-safe and an estimate from $800 to $8,000 to find and fix the issue, along with the mysterious highway droning sound at 65-70 that I was positive was the front diff going bad (as was my Indi by that point), I was done. Time for someone else. Whomever bought it got a good one, and if they can fix those two issues, will be back to world-class for a very long time. Only had around 72k miles on it.
I plan on driving an A6 allroad wagon today or tomorrow. I have always wanted a German 6 (or 8...) cylinder AWD wagon and it's sad BMW doesn't send the 5-series wagon over here. I would get the Benz but as I explained, it just didn't hit the right notes for me when I drove it. Maybe the 212 is just that special that it'll be hard to part with it? Would be odd going from Benz to Audi, but as I get older, I realize that sticking with Benz for life may not be what I want in the end, and it doesn't mean I can't come back to it later. I could always try to keep both vehicles, and if that's an option, I might .
I give you kudos for all the work you put in to your car. I put in my fair share of elbow grease - washing, claying, etc. - but some jackass scraped lightly against the side of the car last year, so between that, the paint swirl I can't completely fix, and a few other cosmetic issues that would take money to fix including the driver's seat, I'm happy to let it ride "rough" from a cosmetic standpoint, but keep her up mechanically. If I still have her in 4 years, my daughter will enjoy owning and driving it, but Daddy will likely be taking it to the shop to maintain. Honestly, the cars these days are so darn peppy it's not as if keeping that car from her somehow prevents her from doing stupid things on the road - though it would be ideal if she had the pre-collision safety tech of the more modern cars. Again, we'll see.




The lesson I have learned with “luxurious”, is that it gets expensive to maintain. You pay the premium for ultra smooth, ultra quiet, and it’s great, right up to that point where some random bushing or mount starts to fade, and then it’s a rabbit hole to find and fix, usually only to reveal the next wearing bushing or mount. I like luxurious cars, but have my limits after awhile. There comes a point when you ask yourself if you own your things, or do your things own you…



