After M. W. Sr. died, M.W. Jr. inherited the car and took generally very good care of it. He was head of international sales for Stewart-Warner Alimits Corporation until his retirement in '95. Incidentally, my father tells me he used to buy a lot from SW at that time, as they made great gauges used in the mining industry, in which my family has been involved in Florida since the 60s. The car really wasn't driven very much between '81 and '22, except to teach kids and grandkids how to drive a stick, or so M.W. III told me. Some work was done in preparation for a sale, and III said he "
truly isn't a car guy at all", so he couldn't give me much information about it, except that his father and especially his grandfather loved it very much.
To briefly summarize its history since '81, all I can see is that it was probably resprayed, some elements of the engine bay were painted silver in-situ, the radio dash plate was cut for probably a cassette head unit at some point and then returned to a single-DIN radio in the early-00s (whereupon speakers were placed in the kickboards and rear parcel shelf), the delete plate was mounted on the glovebox,
very undersized tires were mounted on it to get it to the auction (I suppose this is because the shock pads were worn out and the car was sitting a bit low for stock tires), and that was that. A big dent or two in the bumper came about when M.W. Jr. tried to keep driving it here and there into his 80s (he passed in '16), or so III tells me, until he gave up trying.
And since I've had it, I have tried to improve some things and restore others, with the car having been practically undriven since buying (except for shakedown drives after doing this-or-that). A lot of the maintenance items I think are just typical of a car that has sat for a
while:
- new shifter bushings
- new shock pads
- stainless exhaust (Quicksilver)
- 123 Ignition (old system stored away)
- removal of interior tar insulation and replacement with something dynamat-like
- Zimber wheel
- new radio mounting plate
- new glovebox door
- new carpets
- new upholstery entirely
- new parcel shelves
- coco mats
- LED lights
- repair/refurbishment of dash clock
- Mechatronik KW shocks
- Mechatronik progressive springs
- 27.5mm sway bar
- proper tires (Vredestein Sprint Classic)
- replacement of lots of interior fasteners with proper chrome-plated ones
- new dash instrument gaskets
- new dash instrument rubber covers
- new firewall pad (removing this since I installed it
so badly)
- fairly low mile sedan axle w/ disc brakes and limited slip differential
- replated chrome on trunk handle and rear view mirror
And now I work on detailing the engine bay, which is including:
- replacement of
all rubber and hoses (and gosh am I glad I'm doing this... braided fuel line to pump disintegrated when I touched it, air intake corrugated hose had many holes in it on the bottom, lots of totally original hoses and the like in there...)
- plating of linkages and injector lines in cadmium
- aesthetic refurbishment of valve cover and air intake manifold
- cleaning a whole lot of crud
- installing contemporary starter motor (maybe, it's here in reserve)
- performing compression and leakdown tests when all is back together to get things running
as they shouldWhen everything is well and refurbished, it'll be time for my
own trips. This car hasn't been on a proper vacation in a long time. And I've been itching to return to Japan. Until then...
Some really interesting stuff, as you say, the budget figures i'm sure are what a lot of us have done in the past when costing a new car, add this, deduct that, and then decide what you can actually afford
The engine bay picture is from the original 1963 sales leaflet, may even have been pre-production, hence some of the finishes and fittings may not have made it into the first cars produced
https://oudemercedesbrochures.nl/W113_230SL_Engels0863.html
Ah yes that's the one. Gosh, I sure love the photo of the couple in the red car.
You know, I've had some trouble with the insulation pad, as I think it's basically useless junk that were there just to hide spot welds and such in the engine bay. The original stuff
may have been good (perhaps contained asbestos, of course), but the reproduction stuff will let the heat of a hair dryer through. The thicker material there most certainly contains asbestos. A friend is giving me a very old deadstock pad which he says is that material, but I'll update the engine detail thread with that.