1. Car Forklifted Onto Delivery Truck Because Auction Had No Key
2. Finally Sees Car and Damage In Person on Delivery Truck
3. Videos of S-Class Forklifted Off Delivery Truck And Slid Into Garage
4. Additional Rear-End Damage Photos
5. Cost Breakdown For Vehicle and Parts as of 3/12/16
6. Key Arrives! First Start Up.
7. First Test Drive, Warning Lights Abound
8. Fixed Electrical Issues(?), Replaced Battery and Alternator
9. New Woodgrain Steering Wheel Installed
I finally bought it Fellas!
Well, I like Mike's posts and his helps and tips as well.
I have my best wishes for you to be happy with your choice
Thank you Benz, the journey is made easier when people are pointing you in the right direction.
Mike is good people. He's just being fatherly because he's my dads age. I wish I knew some of the mistakes he had gone through to acquire his wisdom and experience. Mike, are you Jewish?
Last edited by mercedesbenzs55; Mar 13, 2016 at 12:42 PM.
How far off am I?
I myself skipped my Baruch atah adonai's on fridays shabbat to check the fluids and batteries in my car.
Last edited by mercedesbenzs55; Mar 13, 2016 at 01:30 PM.
How far off am I?
The interesting thing about Dad Wisdom though: we're almost always right. When I was your age I was as goofy as you. My dad used to say the problem with young people is that they oversimplify challenges and over-rationalize bad decisions.
That sound is a bell ringing. If you were my kid, married to a divorced mother of three, renting a house because his credit was too poor to buy a home, driving around with piles of wrapped dollar bills and posting pictures on Facebook, and spending $12,000 in cash to buy a wrecked Mercedes S Class so he could drive around like a big shot, we'd be having a very serious talk about how important it is to not be retarded.
The interesting thing about Dad Wisdom though: we're almost always right. When I was your age I was as goofy as you. My dad used to say the problem with young people is that they oversimplify challenges and over-rationalize bad decisions.
That sound is a bell ringing. If you were my kid, married to a divorced mother of three, renting a house because his credit was too poor to buy a home, driving around with piles of wrapped dollar bills and posting pictures on Facebook, and spending $12,000 in cash to buy a wrecked Mercedes S Class so he could drive around like a big shot, we'd be having a very serious talk about how important it is to not be retarded.
Like I mentioned before, I have never had any social media. That picture is the first time its seen online. I took it quite a while ago.
For typical couple of our age, renting a home in a nice good area is just fine. I would rather have subpar credit and make decent money, than the other way around.
We are working on our credit, but as most know, these things take time. My wife and I have what it takes to save a large enough sum for a house.
As you said before Mike, "the way you repair this car will determine the way you will repair my future homes". So far my intuition and luck have been on my side(knock on wood grain).
I think it's a triumph of patience and determination to say you saved for every car you ever had, and bought outright in cash. Every one of those dollar bills you see in the picture I earn with hard, honest work and saved.
When my W221 is repaired, no one will know if it was ever hit or not, nor will they care to ask. All they will see is a beautiful, clean black on black S-class. Only my close family currently knows I have this car. Perhaps because I don't want anyone to know/see it in its wrecked state.

Isn't it you did about the same "mistake" as I, but at 20 years older in age?
Last edited by mercedesbenzs55; Mar 13, 2016 at 02:36 PM.
For what reason did members of MBworld buy their car? Humble cars do the same trick of going from A-to-B.
When my car starts i'm going to slap on two tail lights and drive it around the block with my pinky up. As I drive by people are going to look at the rear and cringe.
Last edited by mercedesbenzs55; Mar 13, 2016 at 03:43 PM.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
The interesting thing about Dad Wisdom though: we're almost always right. When I was your age I was as goofy as you. My dad used to say the problem with young people is that they oversimplify challenges and over-rationalize bad decisions.
That sound is a bell ringing. If you were my kid, married to a divorced mother of three, renting a house because his credit was too poor to buy a home, driving around with piles of wrapped dollar bills and posting pictures on Facebook, and spending $12,000 in cash to buy a wrecked Mercedes S Class so he could drive around like a big shot, we'd be having a very serious talk about how important it is to not be retarded.
and btw Benz55, good thing you were able to speak to the previous owner and they told you the car was well maintained, so you shouldn't be expecting any major engine problems when you get the key, assuming the previous owner was been truthful.
Like I mentioned before, I have never had any social media. That picture is the first time its seen online. I took it quite a while ago.
For typical couple of our age, renting a home in a nice good area is just fine. I would rather have subpar credit and make decent money, than the other way around.
We are working on our credit, but as most know, these things take time. My wife and I have what it takes to save a large enough sum for a house.
As you said before Mike, "the way you repair this car will determine the way you will repair my future homes". So far my intuition and luck have been on my side(knock on wood grain).
I think it's a triumph of patience and determination to say you saved for every car you ever had, and bought outright in cash. Every one of those dollar bills you see in the picture I earn with hard, honest work and saved.
When my W221 is repaired, no one will know if it was ever hit or not, nor will they care to ask. All they will see is a beautiful, clean black on black S-class. Only my close family currently knows I have this car. Perhaps because I don't want anyone to know/see it in its wrecked state.
Didn't you do just that in your late 40's by buying a w220 and without a warranty? I figured so, because you and Dave sing the praises of warranty coverage like a church choir.Isn't it you did about the same "mistake" as I, but at 20 years older in age?
I paid $24,000 for plus 4k for a third party warranty. (Still miss that car but the warranty renewal was $8000 for two years so it had to go.)
Current car was a $58,000 CPO, plus $4400 for the extended CPO warranty. I hung onto the first one after 100k miles when the warranty expired and had to eat a tranny a month later. The following 220 I dumped before the warranty expired, and the 221 will go before CPO expires.
Wisdom is not conferred simply by aging. It's an ongoing process. Some people learn from their mistakes and some unfortunately never do. They just become older people with the same crappy judgment, making the same immature decisions with the same obvious bad outcomes. They eventually can no longer blame it on youth. Then they become bitter f-ups and blame everyone else.
I also never made any reference to you fixing houses. So what job exactly pays you entirely in one dollar bills? Are you a Chippendale?
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Post #181 -
"experience" and "training", in real estate and collision repair respectively, cannot hope to occupy the realm of Benz55's free thinking or even fathom the idea that such a realm exists, mindless drones that we are.
I preordered 17.7k from the Fed in $1 bills for that take that pic. If it came to it, I could become a chippendale.

Last edited by mercedesbenzs55; Mar 13, 2016 at 04:22 PM.
Last edited by mercedesbenzs55; Mar 13, 2016 at 04:32 PM.
Obviously there's the real risk of theft, or worse. Plus in most jurisdictions cops can and do seize cash like that and keep it even if no charges are ever filed.
It seems reckless, you would agree? Or am I missing part of the story?
This way I can get the dents quarter panel dents repaired cheap.
Last edited by mercedesbenzs55; Mar 13, 2016 at 07:43 PM.
The problem is, once they've hand worked the dent out they have to use body filler to both level and then blend the repair area into the panel. That can swell the size of the original repair by 100%. You don't want a panel that is essentially all filler.
On those quarters I'd wait to see how they react to the pull. Replacing the quarters would be astronomical. Double digit labor hours, paint hours and of course the cost of the new quarters themselves.
That's why State Farm totaled the car without a tear down. The quarters alone did it. The 33% rule doesn't mean the quarter can't be fixed, just that the likelihood of it looking unacceptable to the owner if repaired is high.
State Farm, if it's using an affiliate shop, has to guarantee the workmanship. They're not going to slather up two quarters with bondo on an S Class and then deal with an irate owner, who's expecting the car to look like it did before the accident.
In Benz55's case, he can take that risk because the repair only needs to look good to him. It depends on how much time, patience and craftsmanship the guy doing the pull, hand work and paint work is willing to put into it. For $400, it doesn't sound like much. We'll have to wait and see.
http://www.affordabledentrepair.com/pictures.html












