A little history as requested: #3 has had that problem since I had the vehicle, about 5,000 miles ago. But I’ve had so many other oil leaks that #3 had to wait. It is a crusty, oily deposit all right. When I had the old seal out, I did not check for a loose valve guide. This check would be to try to drive the valveguide out using soft hammer blows. I’d have to have the head on a bench. I wonder, if I should have changed the seal on the exhaust valve also; but I figured it wouldn’t cause a fouled plug. The engine idles just fine at about 700 rpm but it smokes blue when I accelerate after the vehicle pushes the engine, like slowing down from 70 to 30. That’s when there is max. vacuum and I can see oil in the breather pipe. The puzzling thing is, that only #3 is shows a black, oily plug. There is evidence that the engine was worked on: It has a nice coat of black paint over red primer/sealer, but I also found studs not sealed, no sealing washer under the fwd RH Allen head bolt of the cylinder head, where that threaded hole is open on the bottom and some other indications that whoever worked on that engine was not the most experienced Mercedes engine mechanic. I also found the valve timing a little off because someone took the head down to 84 mm and didn’t install an offset key to adjust for it. All these things I corrected, but I have not mastered oily #3. I was so certain, it must have been the valve seal. It is easy to damage them when pushing over the valve stem without using the protective sleeve. So I installed a new one and expected an end to this oiled plug. I was wrong. I’m running Bosch Platinum plugs and Pertonix ignition in the 009 alu distributor, which I reworked to give me about 34º advance at 3,000 RPM but the fouling of #3 was with me when I ran the 051 distributor using points at factory setting. I also switched injectors between cylinders, just for giggles.