- Joined
- Nov 1, 2008
- Messages
- 20,048
- Location
- Bournemouth/Poole Dorset
- Car
- W210 E280 x2, w211 E55, W212 E63 biturbo, S204 C180K
The 7g+ in my E63 is 31k miles or 3 yrs as in post# 58I believe that 7g is 3 years, 7g+ is 5 years.
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The 7g+ in my E63 is 31k miles or 3 yrs as in post# 58I believe that 7g is 3 years, 7g+ is 5 years.
See below....The 7g+ in my E63 is 31k miles or 3 yrs as in post# 58
AMG notwithstanding, MB have been known to vary the recommended service intervals for their automatic transmissions for no obvious reasons.
Over the years, we've had:
Every 37,500/40,000 or 4 years
Once at 37,500/40,000 or 4 years
Every 40,000 or 3 years
Every 77,500 or 5 years
Once at 77,500 or 5 years
Sealed for life
It is very difficult to see what mechanical changes have been made to the 5g, 7g, 7g+ and 9g transmissions over the years to justify such drastic changes in maintenance regime. No wonder that for owners on Service Care Plan it often seems like the 'luck of the draw' whether their ATF will get changed under the plan.
(That said... on the balance of probabilities, the previous owner just skimped on the service, rather than having had deep insights into the necessity of the service... though we'll never know for certain)
See below....![]()
Ah yes, must pay attentionSee below....![]()
Didn't read that post Mark, just replied to the one I quoted.
But I see you are on the ball anyway![]()
Probably not.My problem is if I refused the atf service due to not doing many miles, would Mercedes help with any goodwill if a problem occurred to the 'box later in its life?
Probably not.
Unfortunately Mercedes goodwill Is not what it once was, and I think even in the glory days they wouldn’t have picked up the tab in the event of missed maintenance.I knew you'd say that.
Hi , on my C207E400 7 plus it's 5 years as you stated or 77,000 milesI believe that 7g is 3 years, 7g+ is 5 years.
I would imagine the AMG models have a beef’d up version hence the more regular service intervals, or do they ?Hi , on my C207E400 7 plus it's 5 years as you stated or 77,000 miles
Mercedes do appear to alter service intervals depending where the car is used or engine / gearbox combinations.
Don’t be surprised. The number of utter scumbags,drug dealing, vat scamming cash rich lowlife I see driving these and other road rockets about is growing.Sadly it’s the norm.
I'm not surprised; every second one of those I see is doing 90 in a 30 zone with the stereo at ear-bleeding volume levels and trailing a most pungent aroma .Ive been looking at getting a Golf R, you should see the state of some of them.
...There are plenty that don’t get maintained properly.
Ive been looking at getting a Golf R, you should see the state of some of them.
I for one don't ever remember it being this complicated. My previous 2 cars (both Audi's) it was easy, what it said in the manual was what needed doing, the dealer had the same information unless it was something unusual like a recall etc. It all seemed to work. I've certainly never been in a position where i've had to tell the dealer something essential needs doing and contradict 'the system' like I have with this car!I sympathise with the OP. Does anybody remember how much easier it seemed to be before they computerised their servicing; there seem to be loads of topics started about 'what is covered, what's required etc.'
I now keep spreadsheets detailing what's due/when/done for each car. It's also becoming increasingly difficult to find out what does need changing at each service as it isn't even listed in the handbooks/service books on some, certainly not on the MB I bought last year, and it takes research online, or emailing the company, to find out the basics, which is far more time consuming than simply reading a page in a book. Their preferred option is 'just sign up to a service plan sir, we'll take care of it for you'.
Perhaps the majority of customers of the new cars now simply rely on an App to reach out to them![]()
I for one don't ever remember it being this complicated. My previous 2 cars (both Audi's) it was easy, what it said in the manual was what needed doing, the dealer had the same information unless it was something unusual like a recall etc. It all seemed to work. I've certainly never been in a position where i've had to tell the dealer something essential needs doing and contradict 'the system' like I have with this car!
How and when does Audi deal with items which aren’t required every service, like automatic transmission fluid change, spark plug change, air filter change, brake fluid change, etc?I for one don't ever remember it being this complicated. My previous 2 cars (both Audi's) it was easy, what it said in the manual was what needed doing, the dealer had the same information unless it was something unusual like a recall etc. It all seemed to work. I've certainly never been in a position where i've had to tell the dealer something essential needs doing and contradict 'the system' like I have with this car!
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