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#61
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'84 190D 2.2 5MT (Red/Palomino) Current car. Love it! '85 190D 2.2 Auto *Cali* (Blue/Blue) *sold* http://badges.fuelly.com/images/sig-us/302601.png http://i959.photobucket.com/albums/a...0/sideview.png |
#62
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lol @ the amount of misinformation here.
I have replaced the SBC in two different cars, and I can tell you the car gives you a warning LONG before the SBC fails. There's the white messages with two different messages, and then there's the red message with SBC failure. If you get to the point where the SBC fails, you've been basically ignoring the previous message. It shows up EVERYTIME you start the car. You'd have to be blind and deaf to not notice the beeping and the cluster message. FWIW, the SBC actuation limit varies wildly, but usually it's about 600,000 actuation. The white message shows up around 350,000 to 450,000. The second white message shows up at 500,000 and up all the way to 600,000 -- and then SBC deactivates itself with a red message. Yes, a failed SBC means reduced braking power -- the braking force is marginally more powerful than the handbrake, but it will stop the car.... eventually. But then you must've been ignoring all that message up to that point. SBC is a wonderful piece of equipment and I will not hesitate to buy a car if it has one equipped. So long you're well informed and equipped to understand how SBC work, you'll be fine. It's like knowing when to replace the engine oil, transmission oil, differential, etc. SBC is just another component that you add to it. That's it. All this hysteria is totally overblown, imo. |
#63
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![]() There is still enough confusion to talk to a good Mercedes dealer. It may be a simple case of resetting the counting device before the unit hits its pre programmed limit. If it is allowed to do so it may not be resettable. There has to be something there as even Mercedes could not allow the system on the road for potential liability issues unless they had an escape. I again as it was so cloudy got the impression when they changed the fluid and bled the brakes as a maintenance item they reset the counter. You do not maintain the car to their specifications you lose your brakes? They may have lost any liability. At the same time I would find this very strange engineering. It also is odd that the posters message above my post was not general knowledge. I just went back and read it. Pure and simple it is designed to stop functioning. Maybe the onset warnings have been missed for those that have experienced sudden failure. If this is the case they are pretty safe systems as long as you watch for the indicators after all. I wonder how many people have decided to sell these cars when a Mercedes dealer tells them you are starting to approach unit replacement time. Nothing much surprises me anymore. Last edited by barry12345; 11-22-2015 at 10:45 PM. |
#64
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2004 F150 4.6L -My Daily 2007 Volvo XC70 -Wife's Daily 1998 Ford F150 -Rear ended 1989 J-spec 420SEL -passed onto its new keeper 1982 BMW 733i -fixed and traded for the 420SEL 2003 Volvo V70 5 Speed -scrapped 1997 E290 Turbo Diesel Wagon -traded for above 1992 BMW 525i -traded in 1990 Silver 300TE -hated the M103 1985 Grey 380SE Diesel Conversion, 2.47 rear end, ABS -Sold, really should have kept this one 1979 Silver 300D "The Silver Slug" -Sold |
#65
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MB used to replace the SBC when the messages showed up -- though lately they've issued a new TSB (I use the word "lately" very loosely, as they released that years ago) that basically said read the number of actuation, reset it, and then program a new software that extends the number of actuations before critical failure. (note, the below paragraph is speculation and from my and other conjectures and is not hard fact) The new software apparently (again using that word very loosely) changes how SBC functions which in theory would extend the practical lifespan of the pump. It also introduces new monitoring procedures that if the requirements are met, it immediately deactivates the unit. MB (obviously) has kept mum about the specifics, but our conjectures is that it monitors how much force it takes to move the piston in the MC and the amount of pressure in the master cylinder and elsewhere. If the pressure does not meet/exceeds a certain tolerance (indicative of piston wearing out or crud in the brake fluid sealing the hydraulic fluid circulation), it immediately deactivates the unit. Keep in mind that the SBC master cylinder pressure is measured in bars, and polling the MC pressure sensor in SDS returns a number between 100-300 bar. So it's conceivable that the brake line pressure exceeds that number. FYI: 100 bar = 1500 PSI. Water based CNC cutter use a water pressure of 1500+ PSI to cut metal.... so imagine 1500 PSI of hydraulic fluid exploding out of a brake fluid line or the master cylinder erupting under pressure---it leads to all sort of liability for MB...especially if the hot hydraulic fluid hits the exhaust manifold or the exhaust tubes.... fire, fire everywhere. (end speculation) |
#66
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My brakes have been flushed by a MB dealer every two years as recommended since new. I asked them to interrogate the SBC for number of activations and was told they could not do it.
Go to this site and file a complaint. Home | Safercar -- National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) Several owners state the system quit abruptly with no prior warning messages. Did they service their brakes as recommended? No way for us to know. John
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Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA) 2002 F250 powerstroke with Plantdrive WVO conversion 1983 300SD 190K miles ,sold 2006 E320 CDI |
#67
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If, as Deplore suggests, I will get white warning messages, I am fine with being the proud owner of an SBC system. If there's a chance the first warning I get is red warning (and the loss of braking power that goes with it)...that's what makes me nervous.
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14 E250 Bluetec 4Matic "Sinclair", Palladium Silver on Black, 157k miles 06 E320 CDI "Rutherford", Black on Tan, 175k mi, Stage 1 tune, tuned TCU 91 300D "Otis", Smoke Silver on Tan, 144k mi, wastegate conversion, ALDA delete 19 Honda CR-V EX 70k mi Fourteen other MB's owned and sold 1961 Very Tolerant Wife |
#68
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Do you have a link or some other type of proof about the braking power of a failed SBC to back up your conjecture? |
#69
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That is what I would worry about also...
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1980 240d , chain elongation, cam marks reference: http://www.peachparts.com/shopforum/diesel-discussion/10414-help-i-need-check-stretch.html http://www.peachparts.com/shopforum/diesel-discussion/305365-9-degrees-chain-stretch.html evap fin cleaning: http://www.peachparts.com/shopforum/diesel-discussion/156207-photo-step-step-post-showing-w123-evaporator-removal-1983-240d-1982-300td.html?highlight=evaporator A/C thread http://www.peachparts.com/shopforum/diesel-discussion/297462-c-recommendations-mb-vehicles.html |
#70
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If the engineers can design diesels to go into limp-mode or shut down if the Ad-Blue fluid is depleted (something that is NOT a safety issue), they should have done something similar with the SBC. This sounds like a potentially serious safety issue!
Happy Motoring, Mark
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DrDKW Last edited by Mark DiSilvestro; 11-23-2015 at 05:40 PM. |
#71
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Even experiencing the brake failure, I love my CDI, and will buy another in a heartbeat.
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Mark in MA 05 MB E320CDI 402k Granite Grey Metallic 05 MB E320CDI 267k Black 05 MB E320CDI 232k White 05 MB E320CDI 209k Tectite Grey 99 Dodge 2500 Cummins 5sp 148k 62 Jeep CJ-6 120k |
#72
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What I am capable of doing with my car, and what my friends would be capable of, or comfortable with, doing to theirs, are two different things.
But God forbid I should have an accident, and some insurance investigator discovers my ABS has been deliberately disabled. That's one reason why I won't own a used vehicle with ABS. Happy Motoring, Mark
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DrDKW Last edited by Mark DiSilvestro; 11-23-2015 at 05:42 PM. |
#73
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I would advise your friend(s) to consider trading out of these vehicles with malfunctioning ABS units. Sometime you just have to let old equipment go and replace it.
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'06 E320 CDI '17 Corvette Stingray Vert |
#74
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I'm with you here. I think we need to spend some time with our respective MB dealer's service advisors to try and find the accurate answers on this one. There's conflicting information here on thread - then there's a lot of information being alleged as fact too. Enough so, to go beyond this thread to the MB dealers to try to ascertain the actual facts regards these systems, from their actual source.
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'06 E320 CDI '17 Corvette Stingray Vert |
#75
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Spoke to service adviser at dealer. He said most of the time you get the white message first. But not ALL of the time.
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