For the first time I was left stranded roadside...
I stated the GL and about 12 miles down the road the GL began to over heat. I pulled over and let it cool down. I eventually made it to a gas station and shut the GL off.
Sat at the gas station for maybe 30 mins, attempted to turn on the GL and it wouldn't crank. The dashboard illuminated with all the lights and I kept getting the tick, tick when attempting to start.
I then noticed a puddle of leaking antifreeze under the GL. Left it over night and had someone pick me up.
Called a tow truck today and just picked it up. The tow operator hooked up a jump pack and it started right up.
My question is, could it have been possible that both the battery AND coolant both went at the same time or is it something my dealership might have done.
Note: I had a full coolant flush 2 years ago at my local MB dealership and had a new battery installed in 2017.
Tomorrow I'm going to get under the GL and attempt to locate the coolant leak, but again, everything was fine prior to taking it to my local dealership.




I stated the GL and about 12 miles down the road the GL began to over heat. I pulled over and let it cool down. I eventually made it to a gas station and shut the GL off.
Sat at the gas station for maybe 30 mins, attempted to turn on the GL and it wouldn't crank. The dashboard illuminated with all the lights and I kept getting the tick, tick when attempting to start.
I then noticed a puddle of leaking antifreeze under the GL. Left it over night and had someone pick me up.
Called a tow truck today and just picked it up. The tow operator hooked up a jump pack and it started right up.
My question is, could it have been possible that both the battery AND coolant both went at the same time or is it something my dealership might have done.
Note: I had a full coolant flush 2 years ago at my local MB dealership and had a new battery installed in 2017.
Tomorrow I'm going to get under the GL and attempt to locate the coolant leak, but again, everything was fine prior to taking it to my local dealership.
You could easily have multiple concurrent problems. Never constrain yourself to looking for a single causal factor.
1) The increased lifetime more than offsets the higher cost.
2) The front SAM is in the well along with the battery; you definitely don't want sulfuric acid fumes around electronics.
3) In case of rollover, you don't want battery acid dripping on your hapless front row passengers, or you.
Keep on top of alternator and starter health, and keep a battery maintainer when garaged for more than a day or so, and the battery will last a nice long time.
If you don't have low coolant in the reservoir, you don't have a leak. My money is on your thermostat having gone bad.
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I'm aware the power steering reservoir leaks extremely bad. I actually filled the power steering reservoir up prior to leaving for my trip. But that would not cause my vehicle to over heat.
I can't find where the coolant leak is coming from.
I did note when it was over heating I pinched the upper radiator hose and there was no pressure in the system.
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Fill it back up and look for the leak.
or
Pressure test the coolant system and look/listen for the leak.
The battery and coolant... I'm not sure how they would be related. Check battery connections for clean and tight as a starting point. Check the resting voltage of the battery and the charging voltage (after the cooling system is filled, of course).
When I did check it, it was indeed empty.
The battery compartment is dry and I see no signs of water intrusion
Please re-read my post about the battery - I wasn't referring to the compartment being wet or dry in any way.
You have a coolant leak; refill with plain water and find where it is leaking from. When you drain it later, replace with coolant. Forget about the battery and power steering right now. By far this is the critical issue to be dealing with.
This is why I want to get an android head unit. The dash temperature gauge is useless. Mine reads 90C when I know the tstat starts to open at 100C and Torque tells me the engine computer agrees.
-- the needle responds to the exact temp in real time. I suppose the luxury car thinking is that they don't want customers coming in to complain that something's wrong since the needle doesn't stay right in the middle!
-- the needle responds to the exact temp in real time. I suppose the luxury car thinking is that they don't want customers coming in to complain that something's wrong since the needle doesn't stay right in the middle!The other is the inanity of the trip computer switching over to a cartoon of a car at a filling station when the tank drops down to a gallon or so. At the most critical time, it stops giving information.
What about what I asked about in Post #9? I think this is the last time I'll ask that question - you're wearing my finger tips out
If you haven't already, take off the belly pan. Even so, it can be difficult to discern the leak source, if coming from around the radiator, as the radiator is on top of a flat horizontal cross beam that allows fluid to run from one side to the other.
If the power steering return hoses, which go to the radiator, leak, the power steering fluid may drip onto the lateral heater hose that runs beneath the radiator, which will then leak. This can be replaced with 3/4" heater hose at considerable savings versus the OEM shaped hose. If when you inspect this hose, the section on the driver's side, you find it is mushy, greasy, or funny looking, there is one likely culprit.
The radiator may have started leaking from the side tanks.
The coolant expansion tank and its cap can also leak.
Don't worry about the cost of the coolant. It is trivial compared to the parts you will likely be replacing, let alone the potential damage from overheating the motor.
Do you have a history of needing to top up coolant? Did you get a coolant low error message before the overheat error message? If not, then I go back to thinking your thermostat failed in the shut position - and the reason your coolant is gone is because it boiled off.
Depending on the miles you have on this thing, I would plan on replacing: radiator, thermostat, upper radiator hose, lower radiator hose, lower heater hose, power steering return lines (one is custom, one can use ordinary fuel hose), power steering reservoir, and o-ring type seal where reservoir mounts to pump, coolant reservoir, reservoir cap.
The main reason I would replace the radiator is because of the o-rings where the power steering fluid heat exchanger goes into the driver side tank, and where the transmission fluid heat exhanger does likewise on the passenger side. Also there are giant o-rings between the side tanks and the aluminum fins, but I would bet those take forever and a day to fail.
You could hold off on the coolant reservoir and cap if you can confirm they are not leaking. But if you have to top up coolant occasionally, there is a decent chance one or both is leaking. Mine started leaking where the upper (small) return tube goes to the radiator, and the cap started leaking shortly thereafter.
While you have the power steering reservoir off, change the exhaust cam magnet to new type if it is not already.
It is intimidating to do all these things at once, and it increases the odds that a repair will have some glitch while you are in there, but trust me, these things are all physically in each other's way and the labor savings will be yuge.
Last edited by DennisG01; Dec 13, 2022 at 07:09 PM.
Note: My GL550 has 138xxx miles on it.
The cooling fan stayed on high the entire time.
Just below the upper radiator hose it appears there's a power steering hose that connects to the radiator and it appears that's what's leaking. I took the following photos.





