As I was preparing to reassemble my late 230SL glovebox for reinstallation, I started discovering things that stimulated the “Why did someone do that?” part of my brain?
To wit:
1. Why are my two rivets missing? You know - the ones that are supposed to hold the door/hinge/glovebox together to aid installation?
2. Why, in the 27 years since I have owned my car, has the glovebox always been installed with six lower and two upper screws instead of the four lower and two upper screws that everyone says should be used to install it, and that all the “restored” cars appear to have?
So I hauled out my Big Blue Book and paged to the back (Job No. 68-1, Removal and Installation of Glove Compartment – 230SL), and had the shock of my life (well, perhaps that is a bit of an exaggeration). Anyway, something seemed very, very wrong.
I read the disassembly and reassembly instructions several times very slowly and used a jeweler’s loop (2 ½ X) on the photos, then said to myself, “I’m going to have to think about this before posting my discovery on the Pagoda forum. This is going to upset some people, unless I’ve missed something.”
I hope that I’ve discovered something that everyone but me knew already and just forgot to mention, but I suspect that those who already know what I found in the BBB can be counted in the single or maybe low double digits.
There is a leather covered inner floor piece for the 230SL glovebox that is glued down OVER the four lower screws that mount the glovebox to the dash. The BBB also shows three upper screws attaching the 230SL glovebox to the dash.
As far as for my car, after being reupholstered with leather in 1995 by a professional restorer, my lower inner floor piece was glued in place and the piece of leather on the front edge of that floor piece was folded down and glued to the bottom front of the glove box (captured between the glovebox and the hinge). That obscured the fact that there was a separate glovebox floor piece, since the gap between the lower floor piece and the glovebox floor was hidden. The glovebox, with the inner floor piece, the hinge, and the door were then installed and screwed through the floor piece, the glovebox bottom, the hinge and into the dash using all six of the holes in the hinge. The two screws for the rivet holes were cut off very short because there were no matching holes in the dash. The incompetence never stops!
At this point, I urge any one of you, with a 230SL and who care, to read and closely examine the first two photos attached. The first is the BBB Page for Job 68-1 and the second is a magnification of Figure 68-1/2 on that BBB Page showing how the inner floor piece is NOT screwed down but, instead, is glued down and hides the four lower screws that attach the glovebox to the dash.
Interestingly, the photo does not show the heads of the two rivets under the lower piece, which leads me to think that they were not originally in the glovebox design and were perhaps added later to make it easier to keep the glovebox “assembled” with the door and hinge aligned and with the spring installed while installing the “assembly”.
Now here’s my question. Do the instructions and photos in the BBB represent perhaps a “pre-production” stage of the car’s design? Were the rivets in the first production car? Was the inner glovebox floor piece screwed down in the first production car, or glued down as described and shown in Figure 68-1/2?
Regardless of the answer and because the BBB is very clear regarding how it is/was supposed to be assembled, I’ve made a new leather covered lower glovebox floor piece and have reassembled mine that way. In my opinion, it looks nicer without the screw heads visible. See the last two photos.
Tom Kizer