Brake Recall: 292,000 ML, GL, and R-Class




The Best of Mercedes & AMG
The majority of my experiences have resulted in massive high pressure upsell situations.
So again; pragmaticism carries the day.


last Friday I spoke to MB customer service
very nice very apologetic
assigned me a case # and told me to call
888-548-8514 - be prepared the wait time was 63 minutes
this a 3rd party vendor that is registering the cars in question, nice but all they do is enter the information.
Description of Remedy : Description of Remedy Program : An authorized Mercedes-Benz dealer will remove the rubber sleeve and inspect the brake booster housing on the affected vehicles. Vehicles that do not exhibit advanced corrosion may continue to be driven with no further action. Vehicles that show advanced corrosion will have an additional test performed to ensure the functionality of the brake booster. Vehicles that pass the additional test may be driven for up to two years but must return for an additional repair. Vehicles that do not pass the additional test will require a brake booster replacement. The stop-drive notice will remain in effect for these vehicles until the brake booster is replaced. In the event a repair is necessary and cannot be carried out immediately, an authorized Mercedes-Benz dealer will help coordinate an individual solution for the customer, including alternate mobility. Pursuant to 49 C.F.R. § 577.11, MBUSA plans to provide notice about prenotice reimbursement to owners since some of the involved vehicles could have been previously subject to the condition described. How Remedy Component Differs from Recalled Component : Brake booster without rubber sleeve installed. Brake Booster: A2514300000 Modification kit for brake pedal (only needed for a part of the affected vehicles): A2512900000 Identify How/When Recall Condition was Corrected in Production : The issue might occur on all vehicles of the subject models produced up to August 20, 2012.
And Mercedes Recall notification states, REMEDY An authorized Mercedes-Benz dealer will remove the rubber sleeve, check the brake booster on the affected vehicles and - depending on the result of this inspection - replace as necessary
The kicker here is that we, the owner of the vehicle, are completely at fault should anything occur. The recall was issued on May 12 and indicated that none of these vehicles should be driven. This takes the liability off of Mercedes and puts it onto the owner of the vehicle. Should the rare event happen and a failure of braking occurs, your insurance won't even cover you as the vehicle should not have been driven per the manufacturer.
I feel that Mercedes completely dropped the ball on this. While I assume my vehicle is not affected, my wife will not be driving it, just due to liability reasons, which Mercedes perfectly put on us. I am frustrated that both the dealer and MBUSA email has not responded regarding loaner vehicle nor transportation reimbursement.
Last edited by Max Blast; May 17, 2022 at 07:09 PM.
what would you expect them to do /what else could they do except issue a stop drive?
Your chances at being first in line to have yours inspected are 1 in 292,000 and this isn’t solely about you.
A company displaying this level of extreme caution is admirable … although they are of course required to.
a safety problem that displays some likelihood of occurring only after 10-15 years is fairly unique and is probably more due to extreme conditions than any obvious or simple engineering failure. So far, existing data shows small likelihood. Once the entire fleet is inspected … there will be more data!
I’ve owned mine since new and it lives in the desert southwest and I will continue driving it. Not much moisture here. Maybe I’ll glance at it … it probably looks brand new like everything else under the hood on mine.
what would you expect them to do /what else could they do except issue a stop drive?
Your chances at being first in line to have yours inspected are 1 in 292,000 and this isn’t solely about you.
A company displaying this level of extreme caution is admirable … although they are of course required to.
a safety problem that displays some likelihood of occurring only after 10-15 years is fairly unique and is probably more due to extreme conditions than any obvious or simple engineering failure. So far, existing data shows small likelihood. Once the entire fleet is inspected … there will be more data!
I’ve owned mine since new and it lives in the desert southwest and I will continue driving it. Not much moisture here. Maybe I’ll glance at it … it probably looks brand new like everything else under the hood on mine.
I am simply stating that Mercedes is putting the liability specifically on the owner of the vehicle now. They covered themselves by issuing a stop-drive on all the potentially affected vehicles. Multiple people have stated that the dealers don't even know what to do and don't have guidance from MBUSA yet.
Most vehicles are probably fine, but it has been 1-week since issuing a stop-drive notice with no resolution from Mercedes. Luckily, we have a 2-vehicle family and I am able to rearrange my schedule to make 1-vehicle work. What about individuals that only have 1-car. I personally would not put myself, nor my financial well-being at risk. Mercedes issues the recall and mandated the stop-drive.
Do I think it's crazy they are doing a recall on a wear and tear part that in some occasions is going to be 15-years old, absolutely. But, it's what Mercedes decided to do. Where they dropped the ball was having an immediate inspection available. As we all believe, most of these boosters are going to be just fine.

If you prefer to stop driving, of course that's your prerogative and I would respect that. But don't make things harder on yourself than it has to be, you know?




I am simply stating that Mercedes is putting the liability specifically on the owner of the vehicle now. They covered themselves by issuing a stop-drive on all the potentially affected vehicles. Multiple people have stated that the dealers don't even know what to do and don't have guidance from MBUSA yet.
Most vehicles are probably fine, but it has been 1-week since issuing a stop-drive notice with no resolution from Mercedes. Luckily, we have a 2-vehicle family and I am able to rearrange my schedule to make 1-vehicle work. What about individuals that only have 1-car. I personally would not put myself, nor my financial well-being at risk. Mercedes issues the recall and mandated the stop-drive.
Do I think it's crazy they are doing a recall on a wear and tear part that in some occasions is going to be 15-years old, absolutely. But, it's what Mercedes decided to do. Where they dropped the ball was having an immediate inspection available. As we all believe, most of these boosters are going to be just fine.
Issuance of sudden notice is an expected corporate CYA move that will serve to dissuade a number of owners, limiting MBs risk.
But not liability. Doesn’t really matter who told who to issue it it’s an expected reaction and it’s a Roger that, round file it and carry-on type thing.
Part Number : A1644310427
Part Number : A1644310527
Part Number : A1644310627
The above is from the doc linked below
https://static.nhtsa.gov/odi/rcl/202...2V315-3653.PDF
Mine has a different part number (same part number as the booster pictured above).
Part Number : A1644310427
Part Number : A1644310527
Part Number : A1644310627
The above is from the doc linked below
https://static.nhtsa.gov/odi/rcl/202...2V315-3653.PDF
Mine has a different part number (same part number as the booster pictured above).
Last edited by Max Blast; May 20, 2022 at 12:57 PM.




One 550 in the US? Damn! That's rare!
Did not know they made that.
had an R500 with the M113, loved it.










