Ok, I'll likely get slaughtered for this and have to watch my back at the 50th anniversary, but here goes.....
(Author's note: For some reason the site is censoring "Wankel". I'm talking about rotary engines.)
I think this whole notion that German engineering is so superior is a myth. Not that German engineering is bad. It's not bad at all. It's actually pretty good. But I think there are lots of examples of engineering that is just as good, and in many ways better. I just object to this blind, almost religious assertion that it tops all other engineering.
This really struck me when reading the latest Star Magazine from MBCA. There was a very interesting article about MB's work on developing a commercial use for the Wankel engine. Much of the discussion focused on the technical challenges posed by the Wankel design, namely combustion chamber sealing, wear of those seals, poor fuel mileage, and correspondingly poor emissions. But the tone of the article was about how the brilliant MB engineers conquered the problem one by one, built prototype cars, and were ready to go until the big bad EPA came along and set emissions standards. The challenges of meeting ever mounting standards, plus unproven reliability cause them to drop the project.
But wait a minute, Mazda is the company to actually brought a Wankel to market where MB gave up. Mazda met the emissions requirements back in the 60's and 70', and continued to meet them right up to this year. Mazda solved the various combustion chamber seal problems, though I think it was a bumpy road early on. But they did it. Mazda clearly gets the Gold Metal, and nobody gets the Silver or Bronze because all the others dropped out.
On our cars, there are a lot of things that strike me as overly complicated and difficult to work on. I've just been reading ncsurfer's thread on removing the AC bracket to access bolts to change the water pump. A water pump is an expected wear item and should be replaceable with minimal fuss. Yes, AC was all dealer installed, but the engineering of the kits could have been a lot better.
The front suspension also seems overly complicated. Other cars of the vintage have rubber bushings in place of the various screw caps, require no grease, and eliminate the need for the front frame rubber mounts which are problematic. Also, many other cars of the time had already dumped king pins and gone to ball joints which are another huge improvement.
Good luck changing the battery on a 280. You either need to brute force the battery into place, or disconnect the oil cooler line, and brute forcing an electro-chemical bomb like a battery isn't a good idea.
Anyway, the point is not to slam MB or German engineering, but rather to bring some objectivity to it all, and to recognize some of the things that others have done better. I can't help but admire the elegant simplicity of my '71 Volvo. It's not as sophisticated in many ways as the MB, but it's light years ahead of the American hay wagons of the time. Any what a joy to work on.
OK, I've now donned by asbestos shorts and am ready to press "post". Here goes.....