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Sourcing a good 500E/E500 After 2022

Mercedes>BMW

Member
Member
Being a millennial that actually does has trouble reading data and quickly gets over excited watching BAT auctions, I really appreciate the notion of people on this board looking out for others. I will try to be as patient as possible when acquiring cars so I can try to find the best examples while attempting to get a deal and that should lead to a better experience.

Thanks again.
 

@Mercedes>BMW, @RicardoD has a very good 500E for sale now. His mileage will make that car a better deal than it would seem. If you want a low mile example of similar quality, well that could take a while and will likely cost over double.

maw
Ricardo's car definitely looks nice but right now I'm waiting on garage space and some other factors that are taking more of my time than I'd like.
 
Ricardo's car definitely looks nice but right now I'm waiting on garage space and some other factors that are taking more of my time than I'd like.
You will regret not buying Ricardo's car. Enthusiast-owned cars that have been truly gone through are quite rare -- perhaps one or two come up per year. Or you can take your chances with an expensive HaT car with photos only. Ricardo's car is fully vetted and documented on this forum. Whomever buys Ricardo's car is going to be very happy. That is not guaranteed with HaT, and of course you will pay far more via that site plus their stupid fees.
 
You will regret not buying Ricardo's car. Enthusiast-owned cars that have been truly gone through are quite rare -- perhaps one or two come up per year. Or you can take your chances with an expensive HaT car with photos only. Ricardo's car is fully vetted and documented on this forum. Whomever buys Ricardo's car is going to be very happy. That is not guaranteed with HaT, and of course you will pay far more via that site plus their stupid fees.
I understand, I'm just more drawn to a low mileage car bought for less than half its original msrp with very nice cosmetics. I agree it will take more money to get them up to 'cpo' condition, but I think it will be worth it more to me than buying a driver's car and having to refurb all the cosmetics while still having more wear all around. It is definitely a deal for someone looking for a driver though.

On another note, I'm slowly gathering up a trusted dealers list of my own for enthusiast sellers with very nice examples. Nathan Merz is well respected in the Porsche world, and he also runs columbia valley luxury cars. Additionally, he is a part of PCA and has done buyers guides for many Porsches. when I've had conversations with him in the past, he told me to be weary of BAT and to see the car in person if I must buy a car online while scheduling a PPI far in advance of the auction. I've just now started looking into Dean Laumbach, he seems to have very nice examples. Also he has videos of his cars posted on youtube which have me drooling after them.
 
I understand, I'm just more drawn to a low mileage car bought for less than half its original msrp with very nice cosmetics. I agree it will take more money to get them up to 'cpo' condition, but I think it will be worth it more to me than buying a driver's car and having to refurb all the cosmetics while still having more wear all around. It is definitely a deal for someone looking for a driver though.

On another note, I'm slowly gathering up a trusted dealers list of my own for enthusiast sellers with very nice examples. Nathan Merz is well respected in the Porsche world, and he also runs columbia valley luxury cars. Additionally, he is a part of PCA and has done buyers guides for many Porsches. when I've had conversations with him in the past, he told me to be weary of BAT and to see the car in person if I must buy a car online while scheduling a PPI far in advance of the auction. I've just now started looking into Dean Laumbach, he seems to have very nice examples. Also he has videos of his cars posted on youtube which have me drooling after them.
Meh. Chasing any sort of odometer number is a fools errand. But sometimes you’ve got to ‘live it’ before you believe it. :) As for Dean, he seems like a nice guy, but you’ll pay for the pleasure. To me- the value proposition just doesn’t seem like its there.

@RicardoD s car is sitting there ready for the next 200k and the taking. That buyer is gonna be one happy owner.
 
I understand,
:welcome:

As a 20+ year owner of an E500 and the proprietor of this site for the last 15 years, I don’t think you do. But that’s OK. Chase the low odo number. And pay dearly for it. And then pay more to bring that undriven car up to snuff.

Many of us have owned these cars for 20+ years. We know that low odometer numbers are no substitute for a car that has been enthusiast owned and taken care of properly.

But, it’s a free country. So do what you must.

Just remember to add $10-15K to your purchase price to ensure that even a low mileage car is properly fettled. Rubber and soft parts are now 30 years old and often need to be replaced regardless of mileage.

And you’d best have a good mechanic who knows the specifics of the E500E (not just pedestrian W124s) to make it all happen.

I am even sure @deanlaumbach would agree with the above statements. Low mileage is never necessarily a substitute for an intelligently maintained car.
 
I understand, I'm just more drawn to a low mileage car bought for less than half its original msrp with very nice cosmetics.
As a 20+ year owner of an E500 and the proprietor of this site for the last 15 years, I don’t think you do. But that’s OK.
OK, so this is awkward.

I often agree with @gerryvz thoughts if not his disposition. And I’m all for a “you like what you like” kinda world — I’m socially liberal that way. But I also happen to be fiscally conservative, and on that score I can assure you that you’ve most likely missed the boat (and the last three boats) on “a low mileage car bought for less than half its original MSRP with very nice cosmetics.” You’re chasing a unicorn. It no longer exists. You’re about 10 years late. I’m ecstatic for you to prove me wrong.

I looked at several garage kept but not running well, low mileage vehicles when I was looking for mine. But (and here’s the fantastic irony) thanks to this Board, the secrets to getting those cars top notch are now well known, and implemented. You see them recited in every article you read about the car for the past decade. As a consequence, most of them have been bought, fixed and flipped in the last 5-7 years. So the car you describe is now a $60k+ car — way different than ”half its MSRP”. And I’m using <100k miles as my proxy for “low mileage”. The more aggressive you are on that scale, the more expensive the car you’ve described. And the more rare. But as @gerryvz says, “do what you must.” You want what you want.

I understand money is not an equal distribution thing, and your cost of capital is probably not as high as some others. But, you should “understand” that you’re probably at least a decade late with that thought. And these are 1/2 million mile cars easy. And a lot of the parts to make them so have gone NLA in the past 5-7 years. So… good luck with that. @RicardoD car has had most of such parts fitted, very carefully, by a very knowledgeable owner, and represents the best you can get for “half its original MSRP”, in my opinion. Again, I’m ecstatic for you to prove me wrong, even if @RicardoD isn’t.

To be concrete, I own such a car. And it won’t be trading for “less than half its original MSRP” or anything like that, anytime soon. Just because, it’s well sorted and my cost of capital isn’t all that high.

maw

EDIT… I feel like the moderators can cleave off posts beginning #1,177 into a new thread called “Sourcing a Good .036 After 2022”… or something like that… just a feeling… 2022 being when the Fed started raising rates + the 30y mark of .036 in USA.
 
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....I'm just more drawn to a low mileage car bought for less than half its original msrp with very nice cosmetics. I agree it will take more money to get them up to 'cpo' condition, but I think it will be worth it more to me than buying a driver's car and having to refurb all the cosmetics while still having more wear all around. It is definitely a deal for someone looking for a driver though.

Hiya! Welcome to the board!

Just FYI - I paid a hair under one-half of MSRP for my 1993 car in 2016. It had 63,000 miles on it at that time. It was a nice car in 2016 and a lot of people here told me that I had lucked out and bought an uncommonly nice specimen.

By 2018, I had spent quite a bit to bring it up to "CPO condition". Probably over $22K by the fall of 2018..... ugh. You know how it is with old cars .... you make one component nice, and every adjacent component that was at 85% condition now feels like it needs sorting. 😂 In the fall of 2018 the car won third place in its class in Monterey California at "Legends of the Autobahn." ..... so it was relatively nice ..... but the only reason why it got 3rd place in its class was because there weren't that many E500Es in attendance that year ..... there also just wasn't a lot of competition in that class. My car was nice but it wasn't concours nice.

Anyways, today, in 2023 .... now that I know how so many of those parts I had obtained so easily just a few short years ago are now NLA, I wouldn't dream of selling it for less than MSRP. BTW it now has 75K miles.... which is really just a mediocre number for people that care about odometers.

If you want a low mileage car with very nice cosmetics, you may wish to broaden your expectations with regards to price. I hope you find a good one and show it off to all of use here so that we can drool over it!!!
 
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^^^Jesus, now I know why people are telling me mine is a $75k car (MSRP) as it sits… but @Jlaa car is Red and he’s more fastidious than me.

I think more about what it would take to pry it out of my hands (as @Jlaa clearly articulates) than some “market value”… and as I think about it, my non-response to people saying “$75k” probably says all that needs to be said. I’ll keep it for that, and drive something else if I need to — no biggie.

I guess that’s my point earlier… people who have these in good condition can drive whatever they want as a general matter, and “half its original MSRP” isn’t motivating any of them to do much of anything, except ignore whoever’s bidding that price.

maw
 
I appreciate the warm welcomes! I didn't mean to cause quite the commotion with my comments. Half the msrp was meant with inflation as I still think these cars are still a bargain compared to the appreciation of Porsches in similar vintage. I also love the W140 body and see a lot of future appreciation there too. I want to start a personal collection so I will probably not drive a single car 200k miles.. I understand it will cost a considerable amount more to get a nice example and then revive it to be a good runner. I want collector type cars but I also want to drive them. I don't like just looking at cars like others do! My plan was to ask a reputable seller to help me find the exact car I'm looking for so they could find one that is truly original and one that is a good runner also.

Is the classic center not making all parts anymore? I last heard some parts were NLA and when theirs enough names on a list the part would be produced and supplied again.
 
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Is the classic center not making all parts anymore? I last heard some parts were NLA and when theirs enough names on a list the part would be produced and supplied again.

Classic Center doesn't make parts. Classic Center is just a retailer (like dealers are) for parts made by Mercedes.
Anyways, one tip is --- try doing a search for "NLA" in the search box here. Sooooo many things are permanent NLA status without any intention of being made again..... and this isn't just trim bits (to be expected) but critical parts needed for a functioning car. For example:

a) Underhood fuel lines
b) Transmission mounts
c) Headlights
d) Catalysts
e) Mufflers
f) Control arms with integral ball joints which cannot be replaced separately
g) Radiators
h) Air Mass Meter
i) Electronic Throttle Actuator
j) Shocks
k) Rubber bushings for the subframe ---- can't even get these and of course they are all rotted by now!
l) etc etc ... you get the picture

Also ---- lots of sheet metal is NLA.
 
@Mercedes>BMW We get it. Welcome to the club. That’s literally almost everyone here, 15 years ago. The difference is there’s no EAG here, so you can’t just write a check. Most here own and drive the cars you want to accumulate. So this is a good place for you.

maw
 
Classic Center doesn't make parts. Classic Center is just a retailer (like dealers are) for parts made by Mercedes.
Anyways, one tip is --- try doing a search for "NLA" in the search box here. Sooooo many things are permanent NLA status without any intention of being made again..... and this isn't just trim bits (to be expected) but critical parts needed for a functioning car. For example:

a) Underhood fuel lines
b) Transmission mounts
c) Headlights
d) Catalysts
e) Mufflers
f) Control arms with integral ball joints which cannot be replaced separately
g) Radiators
h) Air Mass Meter
i) Electronic Throttle Actuator
j) Shocks
k) Rubber bushings for the subframe ---- can't even get these and of course they are all rotted by now!
l) etc etc ... you get the picture

Also ---- lots of sheet metal is NLA.
That does seem to be a lot of integral parts. I do see other companies making some of these parts. Control arms are still being made by lemforder. Radiators are still being made by Nissens. Shocks are on backorder from Sachs, but maybe they can be rebuilt? Victor posted in this thread earlier, he runs Restoreyourmercedes.com. I had a conversation with him yesterday. He rebuilds throttle bodies, harnesses and MAF harnesses too. Maybe their will be a work around for the rest of these parts. I wonder if one can even restore one of these cars now.. If it's getting this difficult now, imagine in 20 or 50 years.


@Mercedes>BMW We get it. Welcome to the club. That’s literally almost everyone here, 15 years ago. The difference is there’s no EAG here, so you can’t just write a check. Most here own and drive the cars you want to accumulate. So this is a good place for you.

maw
Yeah most people that are collectors are just worried about the values of their cars and don't drive them which is just sad. Maybe a restoration for a higher mileage car would be more fitting? I had a 91 300e as a daily driver 10 years ago so I kinda wanted a 94-95 E500. I guess the Amg version of these cars would be even harder to keep alive.
 
That does seem to be a lot of integral parts. I do see other companies making some of these parts. Control arms are still being made by lemforder. Radiators are still being made by Nissens. Shocks are on backorder from Sachs, but maybe they can be rebuilt? Victor posted in this thread earlier, he runs Restoreyourmercedes.com. I had a conversation with him yesterday. He rebuilds throttle bodies, harnesses and MAF harnesses too. Maybe their will be a work around for the rest of these parts. I wonder if one can even restore one of these cars now.. If it's getting this difficult now, imagine in 20 or 50 years.



Yeah most people that are collectors are just worried about the values of their cars and don't drive them which is just sad. Maybe a restoration for a higher mileage car would be more fitting? I had a 91 300e as a daily driver 10 years ago so I kinda wanted a 94-95 E500. I guess the Amg version of these cars would be even harder to keep alive.
Cosmetically and mechanically restoring these cars is really difficult, as the NLA parts situation is causing real issues on both fronts. @Jlaa listed some of the items in his previous post. Work arounds are either expensive (e.g. anodizing NLA exterior trim pieces, refurbishing the wood trim) or require a combination of patience and deep pockets to land NOS NLA parts. Not to mention that you need to find someone who knows about these cars and their intricacies to address all the issues they invariably will have at some point (from misfires to lack of power to poor ride quality). Search the site and you will get an idea.

Aftermarket parts tend to be of poor quality with considerably shorter life expectancy and many here wouldn’t put them on their cars.

I bought a one owner car with 83k miles in 2018. Despite the comparatively low mileage I had to spent a lot of time and money to make it ride and drive better, using MB parts throughout and now my car has 115k miles. Many other people here have done the same thing. Spend money on MB parts when they were still available and putting them on their cars to make them really good examples of how these cars rode and drove when they were new (or close too). Some even managed to make them look like new.

The point is that you can buy a low mileage car but that will not protect you from having to go through the same arduous steps to replace old parts that simply won’t be good anymore due to their age. Only that now these parts are not available anymore (unlike a couple of years ago).

If you plan on driving the car and not locking it away somewhere then I’d buy a sorted car with 200k miles any day over a 60k miles car that hasn’t seen OEM replacement of major components. The sorted car will ride, drive and go better than the low mileage car that still has hefty age related maintenance in store for it. Odometers don’t matter on these cars. Maintenance does.

Best of luck in your search!
 
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Cosmetically and mechanically restoring these cars is really difficult, as the NLA parts situation is causing real issues on both fronts. @Jlaa listed some of the items in his previous post. Work arounds are either expensive (e.g. anodizing NLA exterior trim pieces, refurbishing the wood trim) or require a combination of patience and deep pockets to land NOS NLA parts. Not to mention that you need to find someone who knows about these cars and their intricacies to address all the issues they invariably will have at some point (from misfires to lack of power to poor ride quality). Search the site and you will get an idea.

Aftermarket parts tend to be of poor quality with considerably shorter life expectancy And many here wouldn’t put them on their cars.

I bought a one owner car with 83k miles in 2018. Despite the comparatively low mileage I had to spent a lot of time and money to make it ride and drive better, using MB parts throughout and now my car has 115k miles. Many other people here have done the same thing. Spend money on MB parts when they were still available and putting them on their cars to make them really good examples of how these cars rode and drove when they were new (or close too). Some even managed to make them look like new.

The point is that you can buy a low mileage car but that will not protect you from having to go through the same arduous steps to replace old parts that simply won’t be good anymore due to their age. Only that now these parts are not available anymore (unlike a couple of hears ago).

If you plan on driving the car and not locking it away somewhere then I’d buy a sorted car with 200k miles any day over a 60k miles car that hasn’t seen OEM replacement of major components. The sorted car will ride, drive and go better than the low mileage car that still has hefty age related maintenance in store for it. Odometers don’t matter on these cars. Maintenance does.

Best of luck in your search!
@TimL's post (especially the last paragraph) says much more eloquently what I was trying to say. I bought my car in 2003 with 57K on the odometer for $21,500. A decent but not exceptional buy at the time - not a bargain and more toward the upper end of the scale.

Today my car has almost 148K on it. Much much driving enjoyment over 20 years. During the 2020 pandemic, I spent 4 months taking my time (a month of it fighting Lyme Disease) removing and replacing almost everything under the hood, just because. That effort started out just fixing a crankshaft seal oil leak and a persistent CHECK ENGINE light due to a snapped vacuum line. Many of the parts I replaced have gone NLA since.

My car at 148K will NEVER be attractive to an BaT-type odometer buyer who doesn’t value 20 years of continual and careful maintenance. But I can tell you that excepting many folks’ cars here (such as @TimL's, @maw1124's, @szvook's, the @Jlaa's and @RicardoD's among many others) there are not many cars out there that have been enthusiast driven and maintained along the way. I would honestly rather have my car over one with one-third the mileage, but that’s just me.
 
By the way, parts like Continental, Lemforder etc quality has eroded significantly in the past five years, so they are no longer a “guaranteed” OE & OEM quality manufacturer like they had been. They have moved the manufacturing of many if not most of their parts offshore to Asia, so less and less is made in Germany and the EU.

Many of us have been stockpiling the last German-made lemforder parts for when they will be needed.

Whereas Lemforder items like suspension mounts and tie rods used to be identical to the MB items at a fraction of the price (and often carrying the scratched off MB star), those days are 100% over.

The MB parts, if available, are often the only quality way to go now. And you can get better pricing than through the Classic Center in nearly all cases. MB Naperville (Illinois) (www.mboemparts.com) sells factory parts online and has a free shipping code specifically for members of this forum. I have a private deal with my local dealer, MB Annapolis (Maryland) (www.getmercedesparts.com) for zero shipping due to local pickup and a deep discount.

Another value of this forum — in depth analysis and comparison and informed commentary about aftermarket & OEM parts. And info on where to best source real MB parts.
 
a) Underhood fuel lines
b) Transmission mounts
c) Headlights
d) Catalysts
e) Mufflers
f) Control arms with integral ball joints which cannot be replaced separately
g) Radiators
h) Air Mass Meter
i) Electronic Throttle Actuator
j) Shocks
k) Rubber bushings for the subframe ---- can't even get these and of course they are all rotted by now!
l) etc etc ... you get the picture

Also ---- lots of sheet metal is NLA.

The MB parts, if available, are often the only quality way to go now. And you can get better pricing than through the Classic Center in nearly all cases. MB Naperville (Illinois) (www.mboemparts.com) sells factory parts online and has a free shipping code specifically for members of this forum. I have a private deal with my local dealer, MB Annapolis (Maryland) (www.getmercedesparts.com) for zero shipping due to local pickup and a deep discount.

Another value of this forum — in depth analysis and comparison and informed commentary about aftermarket & OEM parts. And info on where to best source real MB parts.
So the question now is would it still be viable buying a 500e and keeping it for 20+ years when OEM is not available anymore? Will MB start producing these parts in the near future? It seems they would still make a good profit from them since people are still investing momey into these cars.

The list above is essential parts for these cars and it would be tough without them. Ricardo's 500E is looking better and better. I would want to do some cosmetic updates though. Also MB of Naperville is only a short drive from me so that's quite nice.
 
So the question now is would it still be viable buying a 500e and keeping it for 20+ years when OEM is not available anymore? Will MB start producing these parts in the near future? It seems they would still make a good profit from them since people are still investing momey into these cars.

The list above is essential parts for these cars and it would be tough without them. Ricardo's 500E is looking better and better. I would want to do some cosmetic updates though. Also MB of Naperville is only a short drive from me so that's quite nice.
There is one other issue that no one has mentioned yet. A good number of people on this forum here are working on the cars themselves. There are few mechanics that are particularly knowledgeable of ANY W124 car much less a 500E. If I didn't live near David Hendy and have him as a resource there is zero chance that I would be driving a older Merc.
 
So the question now is would it still be viable buying a 500e and keeping it for 20+ years when OEM is not available anymore? Will MB start producing these parts in the near future? It seems they would still make a good profit from them since people are still investing momey into these cars.

The list above is essential parts for these cars and it would be tough without them. Ricardo's 500E is looking better and better. I would want to do some cosmetic updates though. Also MB of Naperville is only a short drive from me so that's quite nice.
I do not believe that MB Naperville will sell using its internet catalog to local "pickup" clients (like the arrangement I have through MB Annapolis). People local to MB Naperville have tried in the past, and their parts counter will only sell at MSRP/retail prices if you go to the parts counter. So they only sell discounted through the internet site. You can talk to Bob there, who runs their Internet operation, and see if they will make an exception for you, but in the past they haven't for anyone.

MB Annapolis was originally reluctant to do this with me when I moved here back in 2017, but once they saw the $$$ volume of parts that I order every month for all of my cars (it can range from $1,500-$10,000 per month), they made an exception. And I believe now they do this for other folks, and even have it as an option on the web site for local pickup.

It is viable to buy a 500E and keep it, but it increasingly takes resourcefulness, patience, connections, imagination, dedication, persistence, scrappiness, and ingenuity. Does your average person/Benz owner have this? Absolutely not. Even some folks here sell their cars after a year or two in part because of this.

Many of us have been stockpiling parts for decades, and monitor the E500E parts market on a daily basis. This has taught many of us to know when parts are beginning to go NLA from MB (or when OEM supply of their EU-made OE parts is drying up). A few of us go to wrecking yards and harvest parts from the more common 400E models and W140 models that are compatible (for instance, fuel injection computers and metal cam oiler tubes). The community here sells parts to each other very very commonly, or alerts as to the unavailability, or re-availability of parts.

One important part that the @Jlaa didn't mention was the increasing unavailabity of the six vacuum pods for the W124 chassis (and by extension the E500E). One service of this forum is providing periodic updates on their availability (among other parts, like this recent exchange on OEM distributor rotors).
 
I understand, I'm just more drawn to a low mileage car bought for less than half its original msrp with very nice cosmetics.
The cosmetics on my car can be addressed by Alto gray paint via any good body shop. Want to go next level? Respray hood & front fenders. Get interior wood refinished. Note that all of that is easy to do whenever you want, when you are ready, just takes $$. No chasing parts for that. So many of the hard to get part stuff is already on the car!!

now I also have some hard to get parts in my stash as well which I can discuss post sale, including my collection of 1994 headlights

i was just explaining all this to a very interested young buyer yesterday. He owns two 1995 W124 diesels but has yet to join this board to read the collective wisdom of others. Hope he pulls the trigger with me this week. I actually screen shotted the recommendations from this thread and sent it too him.

then when I write this stuff out it makes me want to keep the car!!!

I get so frustrated sometimes when selling the car, i want to scream “No Car For You!” , like the Seinfeld soup Nazi and drive away!
 
@Ricardo at this point I’ll remind you of what you already know but don’t want to hear, which is that everyone I’ve ever met who sold one of these has regretted it. 😂🤣😅 It seems like 3/4 of the people I’ve met who recognized what the car was, owned one (or a few) back when, sold them and regretted it.

:duck:

maw
 
The cosmetics on my car can be addressed by Alto gray paint via any good body shop. Want to go next level? Respray hood & front fenders. Get interior wood refinished. Note that all of that is easy to do whenever you want, when you are ready, just takes $$. No chasing parts for that. So many of the hard to get part stuff is already on the car!!

now I also have some hard to get parts in my stash as well which I can discuss post sale, including my collection of 1994 headlights

i was just explaining all this to a very interested young buyer yesterday. He owns two 1995 W124 diesels but has yet to join this board to read the collective wisdom of others. Hope he pulls the trigger with me this week. I actually screen shotted the recommendations from this thread and sent it too him.

then when I write this stuff out it makes me want to keep the car!!!

I get so frustrated sometimes when selling the car, i want to scream “No Car For You!” , like the Seinfeld soup Nazi and drive away!
It's funny, because there is always somone who comes on the forum looking for "the right" car -- I mean, their vision of what the right car is. For many people, it's the cheapest 500E they can find so that they can become a member of the club. Then they get confronted with the daunting costs and challenges of maintaining and improving the car. So they end up selling it.

Then there are the odometer chasers, who lay in wait (typically on BaT) for just the "perfect" car with 30 or 40 or 50,000 miles. Then they get confronted with the daunting costs and challenges of maintaining and replacing the hidden time bombs the car has, becuase it was not regularly used. So they end up selling it, after paying dearly for it in the first place.

Then there are the (very few) people who recognize a true enthusiast owned car, that has been cared for and properly fettled along the way. They never get confronted with the daunting costs and challenges of maintaining and improving the car, because the BULK of this work has already been done. They just drive it, enjoy it, and take care of things that come up along the way. And they didn't pay exhorbitant prices for all that enjoyment.

In the M-100 community, which I was a member of some 25 years ago, there was a saying: "Garages Kill." Meaning that Benzes that sit unused in garages for long periods of time without regular exercise, tend to go south from a mechanical and reliability standpoint.

I created this (attached full presentation) PowerPoint deck almost 20 years ago in relation to the lifecycle of M-100 cars and owners. I think it is also rather true for E500E owners as the cars have aged.
Screenshot 2023-10-29 at 10.26.00 AM.jpg
Screenshot 2023-10-29 at 10.29.23 AM.jpg
 

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@Ricardo at this point I’ll remind you of what you already know but don’t want to hear, which is that everyone I’ve ever met who sold one of these has regretted it. 😂🤣😅 It seems like 3/4 of the people I’ve met who recognized what the car was, owned one (or a few) back when, sold them and regretted it.

:duck:

maw
Yep. I had the same sad feeling when @RicardoD announced he is selling his car as I did when @TimL announced he was selling his. Fortunately Tim did not sell and thus did not have to experience said regret.

Comments threads on HaT auctions and other online forums are riddled with comments from former owners who seemingly always say "the 500E was the ONE car I've owned that I wished I'd never sold." On the opposite side of that coin are folks like @szvook, who I am quite sure will be buried in his 500E -- his version of a King Tut-style sarcophagus for his journey into the afterlife.

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I personally hate political slogans as they usually play to the lowest common denominator, but "it takes a village" does apply here. Yes, there are challenges but I believe the collective knowledge here will somehow overcome them. Otherwise I would be among the regretful sellers also...
 
The cosmetics on my car can be addressed by Alto gray paint via any good body shop. Want to go next level? Respray hood & front fenders. Get interior wood refinished. Note that all of that is easy to do whenever you want, when you are ready, just takes $$. No chasing parts for that. So many of the hard to get part stuff is already on the car!!

now I also have some hard to get parts in my stash as well which I can discuss post sale, including my collection of 1994 headlights

i was just explaining all this to a very interested young buyer yesterday. He owns two 1995 W124 diesels but has yet to join this board to read the collective wisdom of others. Hope he pulls the trigger with me this week. I actually screen shotted the recommendations from this thread and sent it too him.

then when I write this stuff out it makes me want to keep the car!!!

I get so frustrated sometimes when selling the car, i want to scream “No Car For You!” , like the Seinfeld soup Nazi and drive away!
Are you sure you don't want to keep it for a few more years and enjoy the work you put into it?
Maybe add a cheap beater that you can park outside and use when the E500 needs work.
Some say a Prius is a good partner for a .036 🤣
 
I understand it will cost a considerable amount more to get a nice example and then revive it to be a good runner. I want collector type cars but I also want to drive them. I don't like just looking at cars like others do! My plan was to ask a reputable seller to help me find the exact car I'm looking for so they could find one that is truly original and one that is a good runner also.
Contact Jono (@jhodg5ck) at Blue Ridge MB, he often knows about low-mile 036's for sale that aren't advertised publicly. Dean's talent is locating cream puffs and reselling for a hefty profit, he cherry-picks top-shelf stuff, and built a great reputation on this. But he doesn't specialize in the 036 and it could take him a while to find one. Hopefully you aren't picky about color and really like 199 Pearl Black, since half of USA imports are that paint color.


Is the classic center not making all parts anymore? I last heard some parts were NLA and when theirs enough names on a list the part would be produced and supplied again.
The MB Classic website (link) has text which implies what you state above, but IMO it's total BS, unless thousands upon thousands of buyers with cash in hand accost MB. Even then, you may not want to pay the price for the newly-manufactured part, which could be 2x-10x the last published price - inflation, supply chain, yadda x3. And, there's no guarantee the new part will be identical quality to the original, as MB is steering towards low-cost alternatives these days, like everyone else. I think their "send us a request" link just provides false hope. I've yet to hear of any requests being successful, at least for 124-related NLA items.


That does seem to be a lot of integral parts. I do see other companies making some of these parts. Control arms are still being made by lemforder. Radiators are still being made by Nissens. Shocks are on backorder from Sachs, but maybe they can be rebuilt? Victor posted in this thread earlier, he runs Restoreyourmercedes.com. I had a conversation with him yesterday. He rebuilds throttle bodies, harnesses and MAF harnesses too. Maybe their will be a work around for the rest of these parts. I wonder if one can even restore one of these cars now.. If it's getting this difficult now, imagine in 20 or 50 years.
Lemfoerder only makes the early control arms, and they are now made in Taiwan (previously Italy). There is NO known source for quality late control arms. Nissens radiator kwality has apparently gone downhill after they also moved production to a low-cost country. Yes, harnesses can be rebuilt but you can't make new MAF's and it could get tough for Victor to rebuild ETA's when the internal parts become NLA. Bottom line, there are always alternatives available and with enough detective work you can generally find the part you need as NOS or custom aftemarket, but it won't be cheap. Which is why it's preferred to buy a car that already had most of this stuff done, and low-mile cars may have a number of original parts nearing the end of their service life after 30 years.


Yeah most people that are collectors are just worried about the values of their cars and don't drive them which is just sad. Maybe a restoration for a higher mileage car would be more fitting?
Find a higher-mileage car that has already been restored, like Ricardo's. But, it really depends if you are buying this for a collection where you are really concerned about resale value, in which case the low odometer helps - because collectors buy odometers, not cars.


Personally, I would put far more weight on condition over odometers. I own a car with ~220kmi and most collectors wouldn't even look at it due to the odometer. But the condition is far, far above average. I've seen cars with half the odometer that look positively terrible inside. On the flip side, a low-odometer car can get collectors drooling over the VDO digits, yet be a complete turd. Or need a ton of $$$ in restoration. Like the in-famous Hollyweird car from many years ago, click here and start at post #43.
 
I have to add that the young guy taking a look yesterday is a good friend of mine and a total 124 nerd already owning 3 at the moment and taking good care of them. Repairs are done when needed, even if far beyond market value. He would be a good candidate to keep Ricardos ocd candle burning haha
 
I guess the Amg version of these cars would be even harder to keep alive.
There were very few of these made, and none were ever officially imported into the US. Even now, you could probably count the number of AMG versions of the .036, in the United States, on one hand.....definitely less than two hands.....

If you are interested in the story of a member here who spent BIG $$$$ to purchase an E60 AMG version of the .036, then spent much much much more $$$$ to get it brought up to a high spec, just take a look at this thread.
 
The days of buying a low mileage 036 with confidence in parts availability are long gone…and it’s sad. If one is willing to do so in current times, let them. But you’ll be playing russian roulette to some degree. A well sorted 036 with a bit more miles would be a safer choice, imho. I’m almost at 200K on the clock and the damn thing drives as good (if not better) than when I got it back in 2005.
 
It's very sad the government is pushing us away in a corner with these lame electric cars. I personally never want to own one. I thought a classic car collection would help avoid needing a new car. My plan consists of some pretty reliable cars as a part of a 50 year plan. A well sorted example seems like the only viable option now. I'm not sure why Mercedes would stop producing these parts if they're still highly desirable. If only more people had been restoring their cars maybe this would have never happened. On another hand the government wants more and more control over us.

 
I'm not sure why Mercedes would stop producing these parts if they're still highly desirable. If only more people had been restoring their cars maybe this would have never happened.
Supply & demand would not matter much, if MB and other companies (influenced by the goverment) have decided that EV's are better for the planet. Based on the guise of saving the environment from the masses, they could gently nudge people towards owning EV's by not providing repair parts for old dirty carbon-spewing dinosaur internal combustion engines. The bonus of making money by selling new EV's and not building ICE's anymore is a happy coincidence for them.

I'm sure this would never, ever happen and the reality is, nobody wants to buy parts for old cars.

:whistling2:
 
…and much more…

“He worked for Daimler-Benz, heading its design studio in Sindelfingen, a post he held for ten years. Bracq styled the Mercedes 600, 230SL/250SL/280SL roadster, the 220S coupé, the 250 and 220D, the W108 and W114 coupe series, and its stablemate the W115 – all of the '60s and '70s…

He worked on the design of the TGV high-speed passenger train, and during this time, Bracq was also responsible for prototypes of a sports car based on the BMW 1600Ti and a coupé based on the Simca 1100.

In 1970, Bracq was appointed design director of BMW, where he succeeded Wilhelm Hofmeister (E9 series). Bracq was responsible for the initial designs of the BMW E12 5 Series, BMW E21 3 series, E24 6 series and the E23 7 Series.

His 1973 "Turbo" concept car won "Concept Car of the Year" by the Revue Automobile Suisse that year; the car repeated the feat in 1992 in the Bagatelle Concours d'Elegance.“

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You will regret not buying Ricardo's car. Enthusiast-owned cars that have been truly gone through are quite rare -- perhaps one or two come up per year. Or you can take your chances with an expensive HaT car with photos only. Ricardo's car is fully vetted and documented on this forum. Whomever buys Ricardo's car is going to be very happy.
I will buy my own car and maintain my happiness (for now) Thank you @gerryvz @maw1124


The cosmetics on my car can be addressed by Alto gray paint via any good body shop. Want to go next level? Respray hood & front fenders. Get interior wood refinished. Note that all of that is easy to do whenever you want, when you are ready, just takes $$. No chasing parts for that. So many of the hard to get part stuff is already on the car!!
Good ideas here and I don’t have to rush to get the car to the paint shop as my BMW E21 project will come first.
 
To be honest, there are not that many 500Es out there (including low mileage ones on HaT) that I truly trust. So many cars have stories, whether known or unknown.

Anyone remember the spruce green Al Unser Jr. car that Hatch was selling 15 years ago? Like 30K miles on it? The car was in Uber rough condition for the mileage, in terms of cosmetics.

The cars that I trust most are the cars that long-term, conscientious members here document on the forum via their owner’s threads and questions, etc.

I wish I was in the market for another .036, Ricardo. I would buy your car in a heartbeat. Unfortunately much of my money gets poured every month into that hole in the water that is called a boat. Just filled the gas tank on Saturday …. $650….
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I don't typically have time for threads/discussing my cars here, but I can say I've been taking care of this particular 036 since 2007, and it has solid records up until with one owner prior.

I'll put my Name on this car with out hesitation, IF I wasn't changing my dynamic over here in earnest I wouldn't ever consider selling her;-)

...but yes,Eevery Single car I've seen come into the shop always has had Significiant requirements well above and beyond little annoyances running up solid 5 figure repair bills with relative ease.

jono
 

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