A Dalton- thanks for all your detailed explanations.
Update: I changed the pinion seal (how folks pry out the old seal without removing the entire front plate is beyond me!) and found that there was a slight difference between the old seal and the replacement. The old one has a metal backing (on the differential side). I'll post a pic later today. I went ahead and used the new one anyway. Setting the torque on the crush bearing was tricky, but I think I got it right (surprisingly, the grooved nut did not require much torque to achieve the 24-26 inch-lbs flange turning torque....hmm...)
Download Attachment: pagoda-pinion-seals.jpg36.21 KB
I measured the axle thickness on each end (both left and right), and found that they are not tapered as indicated earlier in this thread. They came in at exactly 68mm, so I went ahead and levelled the top of the left axle, and got the differential carrier/hanger perpendicular to the axle (trusting that setting was tricky-- I wish I had a long bolt with the same threads as the trunk mount bolt, to make vertical levelling easier). Incidentally, the BBB discs I got from MB don't list torque settings for all bolts-- probably has the later version, as A.Dalton mentioned below. Such a pity.
I mounted the new bushings into my newly painted trailing arms. The bushings on the axle side were much easier to mount than I thought. I used a long threaded bolt and some washers/nuts (same setup as my spring compresser h/w listed earlier) to compress the bushings and insert the lock ring (I trust re-using the old rings is not a horrible idea?)
Download Attachment: pagoda-trailing-bushing.jpg39.77 KB
Download Attachment: pagoda-trailing-arms.jpg47.99 KB
As I prepared my axle/jack rig thingy, I noticed the brake drum cylinders looked a bit corroded, so I thought I'd check the brakes out before installing the axles (easier to work on with everything out). Lo and behold! Both my brake cylinders are corroded tight, and the hand-brake pulley is also jammed (cables are fine). I pulled everything apart, and it seems I'll have to drill out the pulley fixture bolts. Ack! Why didn't they just use steel?!@?
Luckily, my drum setup from the old axle is working. I think the axle is from a ponton, as the diff ratio is 4.10, and the brakes are slightly different-- larger wheel cylinders, adjusting wheel, etc). The picture shows the 230sl cylinder (lower- thinner), vs. the old cylinder (upper- thicker):
Download Attachment: pagoda-brake-cylinders.jpg52.79 KB
Anyway, I'm going to scavenge parts from there until I have time to refurbish the corroded cylinders and brake cable/pulley assembly. Anyone know if there is a cheap cylinder refurb kit available? (new boots, pistons, etc) Reasonable would be $10-20, since new cylinders cost only about $60...
Anyway, I guess things could be a lot worse (like Apple switching from PPC to x86- yikes!)
Waqas in Austin, Texas