CEL P20BE
Car was located in Virginia. Today I get a call from the transporter confirming he will be there in the evening. Around 8pm car has arrived. I inspect the exterior. There is a little dent which surprised me since the salesmen confirmed car was scratchless, dentless blah blah blah.
I check tires they are OK, brakes not too bad although I would have expected more life left on them. Interior is ok. Now I get to crank it and to my surprise I get a CEL. I connect the OBDII reader and that dreaded adblue heater code comes up (reductant heater B control performance). Looks like I'm good for a new tank or adblue drain. Either way that should be cover under warranty right?
What I don't understand is how can you certified a car as a CPO if that fault exists? Because it is not a new CEL that popped up during transport. It was there for a while since the code is permanent and stored. So at least it was there for a full driving cycle. The ODO difference between the dealership and my house is only 5 miles.
That is just unbelievable! What do you guys think?
The good thing is "yes" - if promptly taken to a dealer the error will be covered - I say "promptly" and do NOT under any circumstance add DEF to the tank before you get it in - and I hope that the issue will be a quick remedy - if caused by contaminated DEF - then warranty coverage gets a bit muddy - and that's why I say "promptly".
As Certified the AdBlue tank should be full - - if its not - then that was another cheat
A dealer "cheats" CPO inspection to forgo the added dealer expense to bring it to spec - to sell the car lower/more-profit - then have new CPO owner flip that bill to Mercedes under CPO coverage.
Re-examine the transport sheet to see if scratch/dent was recorded on pickup - if not you have recourse thru transport for transport damage - if dent/scratch is on the pickup sheet - then you know the salesperson was fudging, or simply did not see it.
CPO does NOT insure lack-of-wear-tear, CPO is systems/mechnical.
A CPO inspection is 1 1/2 shops hours - over 160 points recorded - if you think selling dealer skipped/fudged - you can pay your dealer to inspect ..
Actually I already have an appointment at my local MB to check the issue. So hopefully it won't be a complicated repair.
The dent was noted on the pick up sheet so the salesmen was very dishonest regarding this. I do understand a 3 years old car even CPO'ed can show normal wear and tear like scratched/dents etc... And I would have been kind of OK with it if I knew in the first place. So very shady from the salesmen since I specifically asked! (again not my first car bought out of state)
Is there a way to prove the selling dealer did not perform a complete CPO inspection? I'm not sure if it will change anything since the car has the CPO designation so any covered issue will be taken care of. But what I'm looking for is to report that dealer to
.... MB USA?By the way dealer is Mercedes Benz of Arlington (JustMercedes). Don't ever go there particularly the pre-owned side of the building!
.... MB USA?Unhappy customers tell many others.... as you've already done....
good luck!
Yes, as a result of that report MBUSA will contact dealer directly ... easy for you, if you stick to the facts, and definitely not a good thing for the originating dealer..
Any required service to bring the vehcile up to CPO spec is done/paid by the dealer - that service adds to the vehcile inventory cost - on top of the Mercedes charge to the dealer for CPO.
Putting individual tech mistakes aside - there are not-good MB dealers that reviewing the required CPO service cost - who may choose not do some of the required added service - and service management, or instruct the tech - to trick the system a bit.
I have seen it happen with customer vehcile bought at other dealers.
On a CPO vehicle - technically Mercedes requires a CarFax to be reviewed by the customer as well as additional backup documentation to the CPO.
On a CPO vehicle - all scheduled maintenance for that vehicle is to be up-to-date for that mileage as sold - it is quite common for most MB dealerships to go "beyond" on that - example a 36K mile MB already receiving 40K service - what service that has been done, and when/what-miles next service will be due should be clear to the buyer - since in newer MB's service message comes up at the next 10K/mark (example at 40K miles) whether that service has been already done or not.
All service work done by a MB dealer on a vehicle - is recorded in the system VMI report - and although a MB VMI record technically is not to be printed for a customer - overall it is a MB service code report - if you have questions on a pending CPO/used MB purchase from a MB dealer - you can ask the salesman/service to review the VMI report and tell you if there was anything unusual on the VMI report on that particular vehicle.
I am trying to be helpful - and in general on CPO side "most" MB delaers I have seen are righteous on the details.
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Thanks for you insight....
Sorry to step over the OP's thread.....
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Any required service to bring the vehcile up to CPO spec is done/paid by the dealer - that service adds to the vehcile inventory cost - on top of the Mercedes charge to the dealer for CPO.
Putting individual tech mistakes aside - there are not-good MB dealers that reviewing the required CPO service cost - who may choose not do some of the required added service - and service management, or instruct the tech - to trick the system a bit.
I have seen it happen with customer vehcile bought at other dealers.
On a CPO vehicle - technically Mercedes requires a CarFax to be reviewed by the customer as well as additional backup documentation to the CPO.
On a CPO vehicle - all scheduled maintenance for that vehicle is to be up-to-date for that mileage as sold - it is quite common for most MB dealerships to go "beyond" on that - example a 36K mile MB already receiving 40K service - what service that has been done, and when/what-miles next service will be due should be clear to the buyer - since in newer MB's service message comes up at the next 10K/mark (example at 40K miles) whether that service has been already done or not.
All service work done by a MB dealer on a vehicle - is recorded in the system VMI report - and although a MB VMI record technically is not to be printed for a customer - overall it is a MB service code report - if you have questions on a pending CPO/used MB purchase from a MB dealer - you can ask the salesman/service to review the VMI report and tell you if there was anything unusual on the VMI report on that particular vehicle.
I am trying to be helpful - and in general on CPO side "most" MB delaers I have seen are righteous on the details.
Car was at the dealership today for diagnosis and the CEL is for the AdBlue heater. Part has been ordered from Germany since they don't have it in stock.
The SA also checked the VMI and didn't see anything unusual. I have checked it as well and it shows all maintenance and services the car received until the beginning of May 2015. Nothing after 05/06/15. I bought the car 05/26.
So the repair will cost me 0$ since car is a CPO.
One thing that I forgot to ask them is to check when the CEL was triggered. Will do so the day of the repair.
Last edited by abcut973; Jun 9, 2015 at 04:36 PM.



