SL/R129: Flushing hydraulic fluid in cabriolet
I could just change the fluid in the reservoir, but I'd rather do a better complete job of getting all the old fluid out of the system.
I propose the following plan:
- remove the return line, direct it to a dump receptacle
- change the fluid in the reservoir
- operate the top through a complete cycle - up, then down. All the while keeping the reservoir topped off.
- button everything back up
- top off the fluid
I'd like the job to be thorough, but not wasteful. Has anybody done this? Is there a consensus on how to best completely exchange the fluid? I'm posting in the R129 section because there is a high volume of expertise in electro-hydraulic tops here. Comparably, W124 cabriolet owners are somewhat rare.




Ironically, I have both an SL and an e320 Cabriolet. The hydraulic top systems are basically the same in both cars except that the e320 does not have the release cylinders in the A-pillars. Since the e320 was a hand-built conversion, I suspect that MB raided the SL parts bin for the top components.
I did a hydraulic PM on my SL per this post: pm-top-hydraulics and the results have been excellent. I plan to do the same with my Cab.
The reason for cylinder failure has to do with the soft plastic MB used for the seals which deforms due to heat/age (MB used polycaprolactone for the seals - a material that's primary used for prototyping). Moisture in the system is not usually a cause of failure, so a total fluid change may not buy you much. An additive that helps keep the friction loads down seems like the best bet to me.
Anyway, I thought I would share my experience.
- FD



