Author Topic: When your Replacement Wheel Causes the Horn to Sound  (Read 4413 times)

Jordan

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When your Replacement Wheel Causes the Horn to Sound
« on: May 23, 2013, 15:35:27 »
I recently replaced my black wheel with an ivory wheel (complete including horn ring , backing plate, etc) for my 230SL and when I installed it the horn would go off fairly frequently.  I thought I had tightened the nut too much so loosened it off and pulled the wheel off a bit.  This seemed to sort out the problem for the most part but the horn would still sound, albiet infrequently, usually when I was stopped next to someone.  :-[  I didn't want to loosen the nut anymore so I took the whole wheel off and compared it to my original wheel.  The pictures below illustrate what I had found, and I would have never guessed if I didn't have my original wheel as a comparison.  The first picture is the underside of the original wheel and the second shows the replacement.  You can see the extra raised ridges on the second picture, which is what depresses the horn contact plate on the steering column.   I don't know if the one with the raised ridges comes from another car (W111 maybe?) or if there was a design change at some point.  Maybe someone knows and can comment (Alfred or Achim?).  This particular piece screws into and holds the chrome horn ring to the steering wheel.  I just swapped out that particular piece (you don really see it) and put the wheel back on, tighened the nut and it is once again working as it should.  ;D

I thought I would share this in case anyone else runs into this situation.

Marcus
66 230SL  Euro 4 speed

280SE Guy

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Re: When your Replacement Wheel Causes the Horn to Sound
« Reply #1 on: May 23, 2013, 17:49:03 »
Reminds me of an old Beatles song, Baby You Can Drive My Car at the timeline of 1:06 or so. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W7dkn1ZnIPk

Hope your having fun,

Regards,

280SE Guy
1971 280SE, 6 Cyl MFI, Anthracite Grey with Grey MB Tex

66andBlue

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Re: When your Replacement Wheel Causes the Horn to Sound
« Reply #2 on: May 25, 2013, 03:54:56 »
...   I don't know if the one with the raised ridges comes from another car (W111 maybe?) or if there was a design change at some point.  Maybe someone knows and can comment (Alfred or Achim?).  ...
Jordan,
up to 230SL chassis number 010274 there was a spring ("86")  pressing on the signal ring hub ("81") that was subsequently deleted.
At the same time this signal ring hub also changed together with the contact ring ("75"), and parts "76" and "77" were replaced with a tapered bearing. My guess is that the "replacement" signal ring hub ("81") shown in your photo is not compatible with the contact ring/taper bearing in your steering column.
Is your VIN before or after the change?


« Last Edit: May 25, 2013, 05:30:10 by 66andBlue »
Alfred
1964 230SL manual 4-speed 568H signal red
1966 230SL automatic 334G light blue (sold)
1968 280SL automatic (now 904G midnight blue)

Jordan

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Re: When your Replacement Wheel Causes the Horn to Sound
« Reply #3 on: May 25, 2013, 19:41:51 »
Alfred, my VIN is after (018613) so there should be no spring by what you say.  I didn't see a spring when I removed the wheel.
Marcus
66 230SL  Euro 4 speed

66andBlue

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Re: When your Replacement Wheel Causes the Horn to Sound
« Reply #4 on: May 26, 2013, 04:44:46 »
Since your car has the later contact ring then my interpretation is that the the signal ring hub with the raised shoulders is an early (pre VIN 010275) one.
Would be nice if an early-230SL owner could verify this.
Alfred
1964 230SL manual 4-speed 568H signal red
1966 230SL automatic 334G light blue (sold)
1968 280SL automatic (now 904G midnight blue)