M275 Coil Pack Conversion
I got my coil packs rebuilt from Clark, and I haven't heard of other people experiencing a similar issue using his coils. He also tests the coil packs on his own car before he ships them out, so I'm sure he would have noticed a slight miss at idle and done something about it before he sent them out to me. Again, I may be wrong, and this may be a one-time mistake, but I kind of doubt it given his track record. I think its something else.
This issue is definitely bugging me. My G wagon idles smoother currently. That really shouldn't be the case.
Just sharing my frustrating experience resolving a identical problem on my 95 Infiniti Q45, which has a very similar 'misfire detection' system---measuring the 'conduction' across the spark plug gap after combustion--just like this MBZ system.
That engine, after 14 years and 140K miles of fault free service---- would say 'detected misfire cyl x' and then shut off traction control, ABS, and Dynamic Stabilization systems saying communications with ECM not working right, and had a rough idle which vanished at just cracked off idle (the TPS switch just open). I changed the offending spark plug twice--no joy, swapped spark plug locations, changed ignition coil--3rd new Dealer sourced one tried worked. I had tried as you--changing everything, many different injector cleaners, air leak hunting--no injector swapping because 10+ hours to get to fuel injectors 'down in the valley' before finally finding a new ignition coil that worked right. Tech at Dealer where I finally took the car said he sees this quite often when the problem crops up--- swapping out new parts to find one(s) that work. Manufacturer (Nissan-Infiniti) says to replace all 8 ignition coils when the fault happens on a single cylinder. That is $1800!! Swapping coils proved the 'new coils' were not working right. I was unable to figure out why/what NEW OEM ignition coils would 'detect misfire' etc. I at least had the Dealer Tech keep swapping out the single NEW OEM coils until one WORKED. They returned the trial ones to stock as NEW saying they would likely work fine in another engine. Go figure?
In your situation with 3 adjacent cylinders offending, I suggest looking for something in common to them--manifold runner, vacuum line, injector power supply, branch in fuel rail (debris partially plugging line?), power transistor in the ignition coil assembly (talk with the guru who fixes the coils) do the 'propane' leak test to rule out intake leaks, snaking the test hose everywhere. I am assuming you have performed a compression test--the 'cranking' speed diagnostic test not spark plug removed one. Also check the O2 sensors out carefully--the injection times on each cylinder and trim values on each injector.
SOMETHING is not right--but what? Leaking cylinder head gasket? Broken head bolt? Plugged oil line to valve lifters" Plugged/not working right 'oil squirters' to underside of pistons? I am leaning more and more toward a weak power transistor or out of tolerance capacitor on the coil pack circuit board.
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I realized I'm making a very good point here in my own thread about how awful this coil pack design is. I'm having a misfire problem and cannot pinpoint it, and I cannot rule out the coil packs very easily because of their horrible interconnected design. If this car had a normal coil pack design, I could have swapped the misfiring cylinder's coils individually onto a different cylinder and see if the misfire code followed it. It's a very basic diagnosis method for tracking down stubborn misfires like this, but you cannot even do that on these cars! It facilitates even more guesswork and frustration.
Anyways, since every fuel injector isn't interconnected on a single printed circuit board and ran by an unnecessary complex system designed by hamsters, I can swap each individual fuel injector and see if the misfire follows to the other cylinders. If not, I'll give a shot at changing the front o2 sensors. After I try those and still have no luck, I'll send my coil pack back to Clark and see if he finds anything wrong it it. If the coil pack checks out fine, then I can only think of a small top-end mechanical issue or tiny (and hardly detectable) vacuum leak. If not any of those, I give up. I'll settle for a "smooth" V12 that idles like an old truck with a hole in the distributor.
The car consumes absolutely no coolant and a very minimal amount of oil, so I will rule out any "major" engine issues like bad head gaskets or broken head bolts.
Last edited by AlexMercedes; Jan 4, 2020 at 03:36 AM.
I wonder if you can 'tune' a slightly higher idle speed and smooth out that marvelous engine.?.




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https://www.ferrarilife.com/threads/...the-550.14000/
The coil pack that Mercedes is using has feedback on the ignition, which is not passive.
Therefore without any trickery, I think it's rather hard to change this to a regular coilpack setup.














And I plan to keep my S600 for the next 600-700 years. I plan to pump the last gallon of petro chemical from the Earth.
mercedes don't want to work on my car after I did the coilpacks my self because I removed the intercooler pipes I wanted to bleed the coolant system




They said it was a lot of work and quoted me €700 to remove and refill all the coolant. However, after picking up the car, they probably realized I own six Mercedes and have spent over €20,000 on parts with them, so they ended up charging me only €150. Once I got home, I cleared the engine light and took the car on a 150-kilometer test drive, hitting 260 km/h (160 mph). It drives better than ever with two Chinese coil packs (€1,000), 24 OEM Mercedes spark plugs (€600), a Chinese voltage regulator (€400), four Bosch O2 sensors (€350), two OEM valve cover gaskets (€150), and a day of my time.
I'm also grateful to those who continue to buy their coil packs from Mercedes for €2,500 (the current price), keeping the brand strong. However, I prefer to invest in my own life rather than someone else's. Special thanks to Tim for the quick help. If any issues arise again, I'll report back to the forum. I just want fellow M275 owners to know that the engine does run, and there's nothing worse than having a non-running V12 in your garage—it's almost like having a cheating spouse or something!








