Highest mileage E63?
Mine is a 2019 with 62k miles. Had it since 10k miles. Going to keep it forever as its fully built 9 second car. Retired from daily driving duties, but is still capable of being dd.
I’ve seen a bunch over 100k miles.
sounds like most folks don’t think that’s a bad plan?
Last edited by SilverE5588; Feb 6, 2024 at 08:48 PM.
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there isn't nearly enough actual anecdotal data to confirm if this is plausible and there's only a couple people that are reporting very high mileage vehicles that don't have RMS failures in the 2018 and 2019 category. But it makes sense, $0.02
I would say that this is just my opinion and only my opinion...RMS failure is from short drive stints along with garage queens.
When i drive my car.. it is a minimum of 20+ miles one way... So both the engine AND transmission get up to temperature all the time to include dead of winter. I avoid short drives (just walk for that).
Other thing i ALWAYS do.. i start the car AND i ALWAYS let it drop to normal RPM's before driving off. No, not let it sit until it gets to operating temprature or 15 minutes idle.. start.. wait until RPM go to normal and off i go. that is maybe less than 1 minute a bit more if really cold (sub zero F tempratures).
Of course that is just from the highest mileage W213 currently... your mileage will vary.

Not sure that correlates, as I bought my 2019 in Feb '21 with 24K miles on it... in other words it had been thoroughly and frequently driven (12K/yr) by prior owner. This car is pristine with full service records and ext warranty. RMS failure happened within 500 miles of my purchasing it. Repaired under warranty no problem, but dealer said it would have been close to $7K without, due mainly to the need to drop the entire driveline.
The bad news is the oil separator used in the 2018-2019 was a poor design for the 2018+ cars as it was carried over from the W212 (M157) engines and was not designed to handle the higher boost levels and blow-by of the M177 (our engine). This is per my MB dealer SA. This issue is therefore likely to affect most 18s and 19s if they are driven the way they should be. The good news: (a) the replacement part has been re-designed (again, per my SA) and solves the problem, and (b) that the revised part was part of the original engine builds for 2020s on and even some late-production 2019s.
Last edited by Autodidact63; Dec 18, 2024 at 09:07 PM.
there isn't nearly enough actual anecdotal data to confirm if this is plausible and there's only a couple people that are reporting very high mileage vehicles that don't have RMS failures in the 2018 and 2019 category. But it makes sense, $0.02









