I have a '69 280SL, automatic, mechanical fuel injection with 189,000 miles on it. I haven't had it too long, so I don't know exactly how it is supposed to run. At speed it runs great, though it seems to need another gear selection forward on the freeway. I think that is just the way it is because the tach and speedometer line up in the top gear.
However, at low speeds, and particularly in slow deceleration to a stop, the engine surges at each down shift, to the point that you have to hold the car back with increased braking for a moment. It's driveable, but uncomfortable. The local MB dealer shop says that that is the way the car is and the degree to which the car pulls forward is the result of a old and nearly worn out transmission that needs replacement. I don't have a problem replacing the transmission, but I can't convince myself that the trans has anything to do with the engine surge. I gotta think it has something to do with the interaction of linkage that controls the throttle body, the injection pump, the transmission shifts and the throttle pedal.
Can anyone shed any light on this problem?
Niles