Here is an interesting set of questions. They are not rhetorical; I don't know the answer.
During the course of W113 production, did the "VDO-Kienzle" dashboard clock ever get changed from the electro-mechanical model, to the quartz? I've seen some faceplates marked quartz, but don't know if those were ever delivered as new when the car was assembled, or it was something made available to the instrumentation rebuilders when they did a conversion.
Follow on question would be, during some period after production ceased, but when a clock was available as a spare part from Mercedes-Benz, did they ever stop supplying the electro-mechanical model and replace it with quartz?
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One thing, by the way, that a clock is
supposed to do is keep time in a
reasonably accurate manner. The electro mechanical version was designed and built for places that don't see the temperature swings like, say, the northeast or north central parts of the USA. So those in CA who don't mind a few minutes here and there, might think differently if they got in there car when it was 15 degrees f outside. This is similar to the original European designed a/c units for cars. They barely know what hot is over there, and were not able to engineer a/c systems for cars. Now I think they have it right. There's nothing quaint about an a/c unit that cannot cool; and there's nothing quaint for me at least, with a clock that cannot keep time. If you are comforted by interesting mechanical sounds, I do have a [quaint] recording of Mercedes-Benz engine noises. Yes, of course, it's on a 33 ⅓ vinyl LP..
If you don't clean the vinyl, don't put it though any signal processor, and play it through an analog amplifier, it will probably play with some [comforting] hiss, cracks and pops.
I'm happy that my car was an "organ donor" and all internal, behind the faceplate parts of my clock probably went to keep a number of other ones functioning. At the time my conversion was just $99.