Well, I guess it's just my luck then.
I don't know how many people have told me that these cars are "bullet proof" and last forever. But I haven't had a good one yet. I keep hoping it's a fluke because I keep hearing how great Mercedes engineering was, and unfortunately I'm still waiting. I've owned a few Pontons that were also worn out and exhausted with around 100,000 on them, my last Heckflosse had a 110,000 known and it was completely worn out, so when this one came up and was supposed to be 70,000, I jumped at it, hoping finally to get a good one. Turns out it wasn't to be. So I wanted to solve that by rebuilding it and then finally being able to enjoy a good one for once.
The 230 I'm rebuilding has a refinished head. Valves, guides and seals were all done. It was also milled and is flat. Once the borescope gets here, I'll look inside and see where it went wrong. From what I understand from the guy who did the head, there wasn't much of a ridge visible, so it could just be the rings, I don't know yet. I've been told that the early 230 had issues with taper, they goofed it from the factory and they all used inordinate amounts of oil until it was corrected by a rebore and oversize pistons. It seems the older 220 was better and had less issues.
As for Mercedes' "constant improvement" style engineering, it has been nothing but a source of frustration, one can never have enough of the wrong part it seems. When you don't have the build sheets and you have to hunt for numbers is one thing, and then find to out your car is right in between two major design changes, it's enough to drive one to drink. I've lost count of how many times I've had to send stuff back and wait because mine was the version that it all changed on and yet according to Mercedes, it shouldn't have been.
Add to that the arrogance of the dealerships, "It's not the car's fault, it's yours". Right; nobody should drive them, they look great in a garage holding down a concrete pad. Yeah, it's been fun and I don't know why I keep buying these things, as I said, I keep hoping I'll find out what it is that makes these things so great. The nice thing I guess, is I no longer have to deal with Mercedes because they have absolutely nothing for my car anymore. In fact, they told me not even to bring it to them for service, they wouldn't know what to do with it.
Honestly, I have yet to see a Mercedes Benz car that has held out more than 100,000 miles here in Alberta. Even the modern ones don't get there without a serious amount of work, my father had 2 modern ones after he retired that were constantly in for warranty work, the weirdest things kept breaking. He spent more time walking then driving those cars. He ended up buying a Toyota which solved his problems. I have that car as my daily now and it has well over 160,000 on it and isn't missing a beat.
The vintage ones weren't that great either it seems; - I don't know what it is, it could be a combination of incredible distances done at highway speeds, mostly done in the extreme cold, lousy service and maintenance, bad oils, bad gas, owner indifference, who knows, but the survivors that haven't completely rusted out were absolutely worn out by 100,000 miles.