Quote:
Originally Posted by Ivanerrol
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
|
I don't know, even if they fixed the balance shaft and the plastic intake swirl flap problems on the M272 by they (I'm not convinced they have) you still have the 722.9 transmission with its overly complex conductor plate which has to be coded to your car and can only be done by specialized transmission shops.