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consumer level brembo is pretty junky....it's a World away from their professional stuff...
Well the front rotors were new Merc parts last year, it's the rears I'm going to check now... mech says that the heat generated is such that you can get a warp on new rotors any time..
If vibration / shaking increases (or appears) while braking... something is up with the brakes, or hubs / spindle / bearings. Also need to make sure the seating surfaces between the back of the rotor and face of the hub are clean, otherwise even a perfect rotor will show "runout" on a dial gauge.I get suspicious when you say it vibrates when you brake, that should not be the case when everything is in good order.

Klink, I believe it's the 1994 E500 shown here, so it should have the 320mm Ate iron calipers up front.Before you go too nuts on front axle components and measurements, what front brake calipers are fitted to this vehicle? Post pictures if you can. Thanks!

Sounds like the centering sleeve, #10 in the attached FSM screenshot. I really doubt that would cause the issue described, but I guess you'll find out!!not sure. it's has a diameter of about an inch, black rubber in the middle of where the tranny output shaft meets the center of the driveshaft..
I've never heard of a steering box causing vibration, however I have experienced steering wheel shake / vibration due to incorrect alignment (toe) settings... it's a long shot, but if the car hasn't been aligned recently WITH the correct spreader bar needed to set "pressed toe", that's worth looking into.So my question is, which will probably need a new thread, is 'has anyone ever heard of a worn steering box causing a steering wheel vibration'??


Matin, did the work you did get rid of the vibration?
Gerry, I bought a new set of 16" wheels from mercedes a year ago - didn't help.
GSXR - well since yesterday and the driveshaft renewal (and center-bearing put in correctly) the seat vibration is almost eliminated, leaving the steering wheel high frequency vibration more prominent. There could very well have been 2 issues, but I'm really at a loss.
Wayne Gates is the one who did a load of work on the car at the beginning of my ownership - and it's his garage I'm going to now...

I know this has been mentioned before, but most of the symptoms you describe follow my pursuit of solving a vibration issue. Mine came down to the driver (USA) side axle. This was after all other components were checked and replaced from the engine mounts back to the driveshaft. Since these are NLA from MB they replaced it with an aftermarket and the vibration moved to different speeds and sound pitch. It wasn't until they were able to find a good used MB axle with clean knuckles that the vibration dampened quite a bit from the original intensity, but isn't totally gone (that's why I acquired another used one from Jeff W).
Just a thought. Vibrations are annoying, as are interior rattles!

"Side note on front wheel bearing adjustment: To do this right isn't easy, it requires a dial gauge and setting to spec of 0.01-0.02 mm. The brake pads must be pried away from the rotor enough to allow some movement, AND you MUST screw in some short lug bolts to tightly attach the disc to the hub. On at least 2 cars I've bought from enthusiasts, the bearing end play was zero. The only explanation I can come up with is that the rotor wasn't bolted tightly to the hub, and when yanking on the rotor to read the dial gauge, it was actually measuring the movement of rotor vs hub with only the one small locating screw. If your name isn't Klink, don't even think about setting this by "feel" and expecting it to be correct..."
Kwontum thanks - can I ask was the problem with the half-shafts detectable by hand or eye?