Not my car




I also still have my 55 swapped C43 mainly because the 204 C63 is an expensive time bomb by comparison. I would LOVE to pick up one of those too. But you can't escape the fact that you can buy a neglected, abused, high miles C43/C55 and the engine will be fine 99% if the time. But a similar condition C63 will be a very risky bet. One popped up for sale earlier in the year for 7k with 200k miles and I was so tempted to snag it but I just couldn't muster the guts. I've personally bought 2 C43's in similar condition and both had their issues but the motors have zero issues outside leaky valve covers.




The two main failure points tracing back to early M156s (head bolts and lifters) are components that AMG improved upon for the M159 and then applied to M156s from that point forward.
Apply those improved components to early M156s like many do and voila, those failure points are eliminated.
Later-year M156s, like all M156s, are also still affected by fuel injectors, corroding intake manifolds and cam adjusters.
The two main failure points tracing back to early M156s (head bolts and lifters) are components that AMG improved upon for the M159 and then applied to M156s from that point forward.
Apply those improved components to early M156s like many do and voila, those failure points are eliminated.
Later-year M156s, like all M156s, are also still affected by fuel injectors, corroding intake manifolds and cam adjusters.
I mean I did all that work on my 2007 m156 which already had 139k miles, and definitely feel the car is still very reliable and can go many more miles still.
Don't really understand all the hate for this engine, I had to do rod bearings and many other expensive preventative fixes on my BMW M3's which are much more involved and costly than the work on the m156. Even still, I love both the S65 and the M156.

Which owners are you referring to? If you had any current experience with the platform, you'd be aware of the numerous early examples out there today with 150-200K+ miles on them...some even with the original head bolts.
My M156 car is an '09, so Year 3 of production. No failure, thankfully, nor any symptoms, but I replaced those components as a preventive measure. No headaches either, just knowing what I was getting into and taking some steps to keep my experience enjoyable.
You're also missing the point. No one is claiming that the early M156 engines came from the factory as reliable as the later ones. However, the fact of the matter is that one can clearly make an early M156 engine as reliable as one later in the production run. Head bolts and lifters are indeed nothing small, but nothing that crazy either.

Which owners are you referring to? If you had any current experience with the platform, you'd be aware of the numerous early examples out there today with 150-200K+ miles on them...some even with the original head bolts.
My M156 car is an '09, so Year 3 of production. No failure, thankfully, nor any symptoms, but I replaced those components as a preventive measure. No headaches either, just knowing what I was getting into and taking some steps to keep my experience enjoyable.
You're also missing the point. No one is claiming that the early M156 engines came from the factory as reliable as the later ones. However, the fact of the matter is that one can clearly make an early M156 engine as reliable as one later in the production run. Head bolts and lifters are indeed nothing small, but nothing that crazy either.
cheers!
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
The harmonic balancer is a big one that's starting to show up a lot these days as the cars continue to age. The supercharger pully portion of the balancer is becoming delaminated and best case just falls off and takes the belt with it, worse case blows through the radiator and other things in that direction.



More info (and pics) in my picture heavy build thread: https://mbworld.org/forums/c219/8443...ml#post8641143







