This is a light hearted post on the most iconic feature of our lovable W113 automobiles, the Pagoda Hardtop.
Think back to the 60’s, to the first owners of the SL. They got to experience a 2 seat roadster to drive all spring and summer long. A convertible top, that can be put up in case of rain. And can change into a coupe that will keep them motoring through the winter. What an engineering marvel! But did these Pagoda Pioneers ever worried about what to do about the hardtop? I really do wonder sometimes.
The Hardtop is stylish, strong, secure, keeps you warm as toast in the winter and provides loads of headroom. But I get anxious whenever I am faced with these three questions:
How do I take it off / put it back on?
When should I take it off / put it back on?
And where do I store the blessed thing?
Now it is the 21th century and most of us are older than our cars. So are my neighbors. So it is getting harder to find good help these days. The top weights about 49 kg (108 lbs) and is near impossible to remove by one person. I have a few nephews that are in there teens with strong backs and arms, but bad reputations for been clumsy. Imagine Jar-Jar Binks helping you move your Pagoda’s Hardtop.
Now I have considered a hoist. The idea sounds great. Drive under the hoist. Unlock the roof. Attach the clips to the roof. Heave-ho the roof off of the car. Secure the rope to a cleat. And drive away. But then I VISUALIZED how to get the roof back on. Dive under the hoist, in the EXACT SAME SPOT directly under the roof. Untie the rope from the cleat. Lower the roof toward the car. Hold the rope with ONE HAND and use the OTHER HAND to move the roof the anchor points. OOPS, SCRATCH, BOOM, CRASH. Oh my God what have I done!!!
So let’s skip to storage. The easy place to store it is on the floor of the garage supported by a saw house and some blocks of wood. I used Styrofoam blocks attached to the rear anchor points. But if you put the roof on the floor there is very little room to put the car in the garage. Not to mention when you drive in the garage you cannot see it over the hood of the car. You may get too close to it and OOPS, SCRATCH, BOOM, CRASH. Oh my God what have I done!!! (I did purchase a roller stand for the roof so the roof and the car can share the garage together).
Now when to take the on / off? You take it off when it is warm and put it back on when it is cold. Well there is more to that. When I take the car to a mechanic I feel much better when the hardtop is back in place. Every mechanic takes 3 to 5 days so the car will be left outside a few nights. The hardtop provides a layer of protection and hides that fact it is a vulnerable convertible. So I now realize I have two seasons; driving season and maintenance season. But there is a caveat, this maintenance season I need to solve a fuel starvation problem and make repairs to the seats. The roof will be back on for the mechanic and off for the interior shop. I will need more help from Jar-Jar.
I love my car (sigh).