All the fuel injected six cylinder engines of the era, had all straight connectors at the spark plugs. The right angle connector on number one cylinder was to clear the distributor on carbureted engines. With original coil and ignition, 1 K ohm resistors at the plug ends should be used. If the ignition is the later factory transistorized or had been up-graded to the stronger coil, or has been up-graded to a after-market transistorized ignition with a stronger coil, then 5K resistors can be used. Using carbon wire or resistor spark plugs, adds resistance to the system and is not recommended. Mercedes specifies 13k max. on each spark plug circuit with standard original ignition. With factory transistorized ignition it increases to 19K max. Check to see what ignition you have and do the math. Use an ohm meter and check the resistance of the coil wire with ends, and each spark plug wire with ends, add 5k resistance for the rotor in the distributor. Using resistor plugs adds 5K ohms. Example; coil wire is 1k ohm, distributor rotor is 5K ohms, spark plug wires may have resistors at both ends and could be 1 ohm and 5 ohms (total 6 ohms). So this spark plug circuit would be a total of 12k ohms *too close for a standard ignition but ok for transistorized. Change the 5k spark plug connector to 1K and you have comfortable 8k resistance. Remember if your engine has carbon wires or resistor spark plugs you are adding additional resistance to the each circuit also.