W221 - S600 - Climate Control Fix (No Heat)
Here’s the part I just replaced
It’s located behind the removable firewall just under the windshield wipers.
Was a fairly straightforward job just took me a while trying not to break things.
Ideally if you use vice grips for those clamps things will go smoother but I found using a long needle-nose gave me better reach.
Be careful — if you look closely at the photo above there appears to be one clearly intact hose connection on the upper right side of the piece.
There are actually supposed to be 4 prominent connections—see the new piece here:
All the connector were broken in the coolant tubing. You may run into this issue so I’d recommend moving the clamps a little farther back than needed then using a vice grip or something to close off the coolant line as much as possible to ensure no pieces get into the system.
You can then easily use a small flathead or something to remove the eroded plastic pieces. I then just used gravity to clear the remaining debris by letting excess coolant spill out each line tilting them downward and feeling for any pieces at the same time.
Of course, make sure the car has sat for awhile (preferably overnight)
There is a electronic connection in the back. The best way I found to disconnect without breaking or harming the wire harness is to use a small pair of pliers to hold the sides—then with your other hand press the tab and push everything downward.
This way, the wire harness stays held in place safely and you can control the downward pressure vs pulling on the harness and risking damaging the wire or more commonly breaking the little tab/clip that locks it in place.
Finally, have extra coolant on hand before you start because—as I learned the hard way—you will lose a significant amount of coolant.
Hope this helps someone!
Today, after installing the new piece there is a very clear difference and the “HI” max temp is blazing 🥵 so it makes a difference for sure.




So back in the car - when set at 21C / 70F if its the same 10C outside, it should produce a glimmer of heat (inside the car) within 100 yards of starting, and proper heat inside half a mile - thermostats are renowned on Merc's to be the least durable fitted on any brand of car - try a new one
useless site - why do I only get 30 seconds to check and tidy a post (most provide an hour or the better ones unlimited without the detritus below).
Last edited by BOTUS; Sep 22, 2023 at 10:43 AM.
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So yes, definitely think there’s a +/- a minute or so on a cold start after the vehicle has sat for many hours or overnight where the air coming through the vent upon startup does necessarily match the specific temp setting to the exact degree.
That being said, after driving for a few minutes and reaching normal op temps but still feeling “cool” vs ice cold air (if you set to MAX cool temperature to test) or “warm” air (if you set to HI heat temperature to test) then it may be time to get proactive and do some preventative maintenance.
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Here’s the part I just replaced
It’s located behind the removable firewall just under the windshield wipers.
Was a fairly straightforward job just took me a while trying not to break things.
Ideally if you use vice grips for those clamps things will go smoother but I found using a long needle-nose gave me better reach.
Be careful — if you look closely at the photo above there appears to be one clearly intact hose connection on the upper right side of the piece.
There are actually supposed to be 4 prominent connections—see the new piece here:
All the connector were broken in the coolant tubing. You may run into this issue so I’d recommend moving the clamps a little farther back than needed then using a vice grip or something to close off the coolant line as much as possible to ensure no pieces get into the system.
You can then easily use a small flathead or something to remove the eroded plastic pieces. I then just used gravity to clear the remaining debris by letting excess coolant spill out each line tilting them downward and feeling for any pieces at the same time.
Of course, make sure the car has sat for awhile (preferably overnight)
There is a electronic connection in the back. The best way I found to disconnect without breaking or harming the wire harness is to use a small pair of pliers to hold the sides—then with your other hand press the tab and push everything downward.
This way, the wire harness stays held in place safely and you can control the downward pressure vs pulling on the harness and risking damaging the wire or more commonly breaking the little tab/clip that locks it in place.
Finally, have extra coolant on hand before you start because—as I learned the hard way—you will lose a significant amount of coolant.
Hope this helps someone!
JR








cars's heaters used to play up when the cast iron block would self destruct adding 3 ounces of rust to block up small pathways, we didn't understand how to make a good antifreeze, it leaked so much people would top it up with rubbish, and the heater tap was shut of and we'd have no coolant flow for 6 months....
the world moved on (I thought) for many years now the heater matrix is part of the cooling systems capacity and its just the hot air we waste - throwing it away or warming up the passenger compartment....
the coolant in a Merc of this vintage is 12 years fit and forget
You will lose a significant amount of coolant doing the job so if you wanted to plan to flush the entire system during the job it wouldn’t be a bad idea at all.
I didn’t plan to flush but needed to replace just under 4 qts.












As for the schedule, what I am currently seeing is coolant is a service 13 (for 2007 W221 EXCLUDING AMG and S600 models). 143k miles and 15 year interval. Yeah, I don't agree with that. I'd put it more on a 5 year schedule (almost regardless of mileage).
Last edited by kevm14; Nov 20, 2023 at 01:52 PM.
Last edited by Jaytechnical; Aug 24, 2025 at 06:41 AM.
if u update the comand system - AC is disabled, as old lies left forgotten in some archaic development part of the operating system are wrong - the update believes the car was made with an old magnetic clutch AC compressor when it wasn't....





