Brake calipers
Thank you
That said, it is a pretty standard setup.
1 - You need to go into the menus to retract the rear brakes as you noted. Plenty of youtube videos, big thing when following their instructions is make sure the odometer is displayed before the button press sequence I fought with that for a while.
2 - Haven't seen Mercedes specific instructions, but always safe to go furthest to closest in bleeding so RR, LR, RF, LF. Some manufacturers have you do the diagonals since they share a line, but far->close always seems to work.
3 - Front calipers have inboard and outboard bleeders. Mercedes used to (and as far as I know still do, but haven't seen anything lately) recommend outboard bleeder first than inboard. Many other manufacturers actually go the other way around and say inboard first. Again, probably doesn't really matter if you do a good job either way. I sometimes do inboard->outboard->inboard (again) just to be sure.
4 - The Mercedes brake fluid is actually good stuff and would be great to use. The spec calls for Dot 4+, which is "better" than Dot 4 specifications (some companies market fluids similarly or with super dot 4 or something). Generally a good 4 will work, but find a 4 "plus" to stay in spec. 5.1 should also meet the specifications (do not use "5" as it is different stuff and not meant for these vehicles, DOT really screwed up naming 5 and 5.1).
5 - The caliper bolts are almost certainly spec'd as one-time-use bolts, so you may want to pick up a set of those. Plenty of people have reused caliper bolts on various cars for years without an issue, but they aren't very expensive so probably a good idea to change them.
That said, it is a pretty standard setup.
1 - You need to go into the menus to retract the rear brakes as you noted. Plenty of youtube videos, big thing when following their instructions is make sure the odometer is displayed before the button press sequence I fought with that for a while.
2 - Haven't seen Mercedes specific instructions, but always safe to go furthest to closest in bleeding so RR, LR, RF, LF. Some manufacturers have you do the diagonals since they share a line, but far->close always seems to work.
3 - Front calipers have inboard and outboard bleeders. Mercedes used to (and as far as I know still do, but haven't seen anything lately) recommend outboard bleeder first than inboard. Many other manufacturers actually go the other way around and say inboard first. Again, probably doesn't really matter if you do a good job either way. I sometimes do inboard->outboard->inboard (again) just to be sure.
4 - The Mercedes brake fluid is actually good stuff and would be great to use. The spec calls for Dot 4+, which is "better" than Dot 4 specifications (some companies market fluids similarly or with super dot 4 or something). Generally a good 4 will work, but find a 4 "plus" to stay in spec. 5.1 should also meet the specifications (do not use "5" as it is different stuff and not meant for these vehicles, DOT really screwed up naming 5 and 5.1).
5 - The caliper bolts are almost certainly spec'd as one-time-use bolts, so you may want to pick up a set of those. Plenty of people have reused caliper bolts on various cars for years without an issue, but they aren't very expensive so probably a good idea to change them.






