SL/R230: Is Bragging Allowed Here?
Black Kettle National Monument (and killing ground), Cheyenne OK
Adobe Walls battle site, Texas Panhandle (near nothing, and nothing there, but I wanted to see it)
Very Large Array astronomical dishes, 50 mi. W of Socorro, NM
Trinity Site, White Sands Missile Range, NM
White Sands National Monument, Alamogordo NM
Carlsbad Caverns, NM
Palo Duro Canyon, Texas
Crossing the Sangre de Cristo mountains on US 82 E out of Alamogordo was a treat. The car handled perfectly up and down the range. I first thought I should manually drop the transmission into lower gears to maintain speed descending the mountains, but decided it was even easier to engage cruise control and just let the car do its own gear shifting. The only times I touched the brakes were for slower traffic.
US 82 straightens out crossing eastern New Mexico. There was almost no other traffic and visibility was unlimited. I stuck the Escort fuzzbuster on the windshield and eased the cruise control up to 100 then on to 130. Seemed like the faster I went the lower the car squatted and the more stable it became. I envy the Germans their autobahns.
I had to wait until I was an old man to get the R230. If only I had had this car when I was 18 ....

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I have to say I did a couple long trips in mine, both without issue.
First was Philly to Denver when I bought it, about 1300 miles.
Second was 2000 miles, Denver to Yellowstone to Jackson, WY to Denver over a 9 day span. That trip also had the cruise set at 110 for stretches in Wyoming.
Both had zero issues, but I chickened out and got towing coverage on insurance 'just in case'.
Bottom line - get an SDS, fix the current, known, and potential issues, maintain it by the book, enjoy the heck out of it.
My answer is a bit mixed: chronologically I'll be 72 in December. But inside this old worn out body there's still a 26-year old Navy lieutenant who's just counting the days until the ship hits the next liberty port.
I know I'm just an old geezer driving around in my red SL550, but it makes me feel good, it sorta makes me feel young ... or maybe that's just an illusion. Come to think of it ... of course it's an illusion. I know that nearly all of Life's significant events and challenges are behind me and ... unlike many of my shipmates ... I met them square-on and survived to tell about it.
Every day I step into the garage and spend a moment just staring at my car. It took me 70 years to have something this nice that's all mine. This past weekend I washed, clay barred, waxed, and machine-polished my car and my wife's E350 (also a 2007). There wasn't a moment of "work" in any of it ... it was the kid in me having fun. I'm at least a "moderately" decent mechanic ... I had motorcycles all my life, so I've accumulated a lotta tools and a bit of wrench-turning experience ... so I can do the simple stuff. And I have a good friend who is our local MB guru ... he works only on MBs and he knows his stuff. I feel confident I can drive this car until the state takes away my license or USAA quits insuring me.
And I hope everybody else who has an R230 feels pretty much the same way.
You ask, "How old do you feel?" Let's hit the beach and I'll show you, Mate. First round's on me.
My answer is a bit mixed: chronologically I'll be 72 in December. But inside this old worn out body there's still a 26-year old Navy lieutenant...
...You ask, "How old do you feel?" Let's hit the beach and I'll show you, Mate. First round's on me.

I love the stories here, because it shows that this model transcends all age groups. My SL350 is my fifth SL, after having had a succession of R230 500's and a 600 in the mix, and lately 3 Aston Martins and a couple Bentley GT's.
But I keep coming back to the R230 because of it's relatively timeless looks, reasonable running costs, and more importantly the luxury of a folding hardtop. After paying out $8000 for repairs to the roof of my Vantage Roadster last year, I like the dependability of MB. I say that with my fingers crossed!
So with retirement looming and my driving area reducing, I decided to quit the high expenses of luxury sports cars, and a few weeks ago I got a cheap runaround, the SL350.
But it is an old platform and harder to drive than what I've been used to, and already I'm regretting in my decision. So I'm looking round for a newer version. My age doesn't come into it... I can see myself driving top down until they drag me away from it.
Heatwave, your trip sounded like a lot of fun and I hope to hear the next instalment of travelin' stories from you soon!
Drove my '03 SL55 from Provo Utah to eastern PA 2 1/2 years ago when I bought it. The mountain driving, in UT, WY, and WV, along with some pretty high speeds in eastern WY, western NE (my original home state) kept the smile on my face all the way home. I'd just sold my Porsche track car, and this SL was so amazing that I took it to Watkins Glen about 2 months after getting it home and spent 2 days driving that amazing track. I then 'retired' from that 'fun' permanently.
Every time I drive the SL55, and take a curve at good speed with the car staying flat, or accelerate to pass another car and the supercharger pushes me back into the seat I smile from ear to ear. Great cars - enjoy them to the max. Even though I'm retired, can't get enough time to drive the car as much as I should. About 6K miles in 2 1/2 years, now up to 52K on the odo.
Gut Fahren
1. Hurricane Audrey ravaged parts of south Louisiana from which my family had recently moved ... it was difficult for me to accept and understand what had happened to places and people we had known.
2. Mercedes Benz ... the first time I heard those words. And 300SL. And all together ... Mercedes Benz 300SL.
Couple who lived across the street from us ... their oldest son was a Captain in the airforce. He had flown the F86 and was en route to joining an F100 squadron in Texas. How cool izzat?! Look ... I'm only 12 ... very impressionable.
Anyhow, the young Captain comes home for a coupla weeks leave in the summer of '57. He drives up in the most gorgeous car I had ever seen: a red Mercedes Benz 300SL. I didn't know cars like that even existed. I had never seen one, had never heard of one, didn't know what a Mercedes Benz was or where it came from. Fords and Chevrolets and Plymouths and Dodges ... I knew all those. But Mercedes Benz ... it just sounds cool. I've never done drugs and don't have firsthand knowledge of how they affect one's brain, but I have to guess it's sorta like the effect that red Mercedes Benz 300SL had on me.
The Captain took time to show off his car to us boys. We had never seen doors like that, of course. How cool are gullwing doors?! And a white steering wheel on a hinge that makes it easier to get in/out! When you get in and lower the door, there's a ledge where you can rest your arm ... you gotta drag your butt over the ledge getting in and out. Captain told us he drove with his beer sitting on the ledge. And those flares over the front wheels and rear wheels ... we'd never seen anything like that. Captain opened the hood to show us the engine. I was a bit non-plussed that it was a 6 cyl engine and it leaned over to one side ... seemed like an odd way to put an engine in a car. I thought everything had to be V8. He drove each of us boys around the 'hood with the doors opened up ... it was summertime in south Mississippi and it was hot, but here I was in a Mercedes Benz 300SL riding around with the doors not "open," but "up." Big difference.
Hot damn. I remember that 12-year old lad ... he was a good kid. I hate getting old.
This thread is really demonstrating how these cars enrich our lives! Thanks to all that have shared a little bit of their lives with us!!!

By the way, I just turned 73 in June and can still get in and out of my car fairly easily. It's the crawling under it that is getting more difficult.

My two Merc's keep me dedicated to staying trim for the required maintenance.
Bob







