On this 1969 280SL of mine, the automatic shifts very smooth when the car is cold i.e. when it has not been driven for 8 hours or more. After a few miles, after the car has warmed up, the transmission begins to shift with a pronounced jerk, especially from 2nd to 3rd gear. Much more pronounced when I’m easy on the throttle. When I wind the car up in 2nd gear, to about 3’500 rpm, it shifts pretty smooth, even when warm. It always shifts down nicely. I thought at first, that when cold, the hydraulic clutch has not filled completely with transmission fluid and has more slip, but I have made stall tests, both cold and warm, and found no difference. The hydraulic clutch has very little slip compared to the torque converter used in later MB models. Perhaps as a result, later transmissions shift much more smoothly. I’m very much puzzled by the fact that it shifts so nice when cold and I wish, I could obtain that during all of my driving. My friendly MB dealer tells me, the transmission is fine, and what I experience is normal for the car. Any comments or advice?
1969 Signal Red 280SL, Automatic, P/S, A/C. Mechanical engineer-ret.