Does your car sit lower on one side?
The front left and front right can be independently adjusted to your desired height. My left front was consistently about 1/2" too low vs. the right front, so I had my independent MB shop adjust it for $40. The original owner got the left front shock replaced but the shop obviously didn't set the height properly.
The rears shocks are both locked together and raise/lower in unison. Even then, I can have 1/8" difference in them.
Based on what I read from other posts, the stock ride height should be the following on a flat surface (while set in comfort mode):
Front: 26.5" (from ground to middle of fender wheel well opening)
Rear: 26.25" (from ground to middle of fender wheel well opening)
Have one person measure the height (using a reinforced cloth measuring tape so you don't scratch your fender paint), while the other person adjusts the STAR. For each section, raise beyond your desired height by 1/2" then have them let out the air so it finally drops to your desired height. I took it in 3x to the shop for this, until the last time, I measured while I had them push the buttons. It's been set perfectly ever since.


The more you know...
However, I believe the more correct response is this:
Normal airmatic specification: Base height +/- 10mm
What I'm getting at is that sometimes the "base height" may be different for the front left and for the front right (i.e. when you get new shocks replaced). And while it may within spec to be +/- 10mm from its initial set point, the base height (from what I remember, it was a voltage reading) can be adjusted to level out your car--if indeed your car height is significantly off at the corners.
My car was secondhand when I bought it, and the original owner had the L front shock replaced. When I considered buying it, I noticed the left front fender consistently sat noticeably lower than the right front side--the seller mentioned "it's always been that way" since I had the dealer replaced the left front shock. Even when in the raised position, it was still noticeably lower than the right front side. It wasn't until I got the car delivered that I had my independent MB mechanic adjust the front left side (recalibrate the whole suspension, the adjust the voltage ("height") levels) so the fender height matched the right front side. Ever since then, the left front and right front has been spot on in fender height (at the base height).
But agreed, if at rest the front left and front right are no more than 10mm different, I wouldn't worry.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG








