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#19
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M272's started going in to W211's as early as 2005.
Read about these engines here : Mercedes-Benz M272 engine M273 engines had similar problems. M271 4 cylinder engines had their own set off issues - similar to M272. Although - AFAIK no 4 cylinder E classes were sold in the U.S. W211's up until the 2006 update had issues with the fly by wire braking - steer clear unless you want to fork out $$$$$ for a new module. Late 2007 cars onward are the ones to go for. Dare I say it - as a W210 owner. W210's are now getting up in age. If you have one and have had it for a while - no big issue but I wouldn't be going out of my way to get one unless you find a really good one. My W210 has just 100,000 miles on it and still drives like a Limo. I was going to replace it with a late W211 but couldn't find one with the low mileage and reasonable price. So I bought a low mileage W204 C300. (25K miles). The W210 will be kept and used for the long journeys |
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