Palfrem
MB Enthusiast
- Joined
- Aug 11, 2005
- Messages
- 2,965
- Location
- Solihull, near Birmingham
- Car
- W124 E36 AMG, G 300 GEL his, SLK 200 hers
So, 1000 plus miles into W124 E36 ownership and what are my thoughts?
It’s the first car I have ever had where a random stranger entered into a conversation about it – I was returning to the station car park yesterday and one of the guys working for the contractors refurbishing the car park came over as I was putting my trappings in the boot and said how it was the best preserved w124 he’d ever seen and wanted to know all about it. That’s definitely never happened before. He seemed a knowledgeable chap too and said he’d had an early w124 in the past but it had long since died of rust.
I think it still the shape looks good. Discuss. To me the form is pretty timeless, just not “modern”. It sits quietly and confidently in the works car park like a leather bound Dickens on a shelf of airport paperbacks. It doesn’t jostle for attention like some of the showier up-to-the-minute offerings with their alluring curves and me, me, me corporate fashion cues.
As to driving, well, it’s now become a bit of an occasion as opposed to a simple journey. I like the way the speedo needle can’t quite make its mind up until you are doing about 35 mph and it flits up and down like the speedo in my 1962 mini used to when I was about the same age this car is now. It settles down OK at motorway speeds but it’s hopelessly optimistic when compared to the GPS readout.
I quite like the smell of the interior. Who was it on Top Gear said they bought a car for its smell? When the guy who fitted the new radio (Blaupunkt Toronto with Bluetooth) was sat in it he said that with his eyes closed he’d be able to tell it was an old Merc. Is that true I wonder? The new radio is fine, paired with a phone without any profanity at all. It accepts SD cards too so I can have endless music. The car does need some new speakers. Open to suggestions here chaps.
There’s no need to drive fast in this car. It will show much newer cars a clean pair of metaphorical heels if required, but I reckon my average speed has dropped by about 10 mph on motorways and I have turned into something of a pootler on urban roads. Mind you, with oscillating speedo needle, your guess on the actual speed is as good as mine. I’m perfectly happy just proceeding calmly and carefully toward my destination.
For those who may be interested, it is presently giving an average of 29.7 mpg at 85% motorway 15% urban.
The engine has a pleasing tone. There is a satisfying chord when it starts and settles to tick-over (did I say it sometimes hunts a bit – the garage tells me it’s normal) and if you want to overtake on the motorway, anything above about 3000 rpm delivers a resonant, harmonic baritone that remains as background music and never dominates like 55s and 63s. Not that I find the modern AMG pipes unpleasant, it’s just a tune played on a different instrument.
Her Ladyship (who doesn't drink) borrowed it the other night for a girly night out taxi and as she was driving away there was a lovely key change as it shifted up.
The handling is better than I expected. Firm but not arduous like a BMW. I’ve not exactly explored the limits of grip, but when pushed it felt like it knew what it was doing and only needed me to hang onto the steering wheel. Nicely relaxed, no roll or drama. It has Pirelli tyres on at present and they are very noisy on motorways. There’s a thrum that sounds just like someone is drumming on the side-wall or there's a big ballbearing doing a roulette ball spin around the inside of tyre. I can’t describe it, but I’ll be glad when they are finished and I can get some other tyres.
The brakes are as good as my C280 but I suspect it will be needing some new disks before long. Perhaps it would be nice to get the calipers refurbished too.
The electric aerial is jolly entertaining. It rises in its own sweet time and just like me, it never quite achieves the same degree of erection as it did when it was younger. When the radio is turned off it lowers like a flag at sundown in about the same time as it takes to get out of the car and lock it. I’ve given it a spray of silicone lubricant but to very little effect. It needs some sort of telescopic Viagra I suspect.
The driving position is pretty well perfect and even Her Ladyship can get comfy. I’m not convinced she really gets this old car thing but she can see I’m happy so she humours me.
The seats are comfy but still supportive, they don’t appear to have sagged at all and the leather is nicely lived in and looks good.
What do I miss when compared with the fripperies available on modern machinery? The volume controls on the steering wheel for sure and the ability to change radio station, CD track, etc.
I miss that 3 flashes thing on the indicator for a flick of the stalk, oh and I miss the stalk being on the left – still.
I’ll miss it when the car tells you it wants a drink of oil and a service. Note to self – must get back into the habit of weekly checks. It probably actually uses some oil as well, so I’ll get some on my next trip to Costco. Just buy the traditional 10W 40, not the all singing all dancing super thin synthetic Mobil 1?
For sure there's a few minor faults that are to be fixed soon, but nothing that’s taken the shine off ownership. For peace of mind I bought the full 3 year warranty on it. It covers any single “claim” up to £2K so I hope that should cover most eventualities. It was very good value for money I though too.
There are a few tiny paint blemishes and stone chips I want touched up and maybe I'll get it valeted. Oh no, does this mean I'll be detailing it soon not just giving it a wash and some Autoglym.
I'll enjoy running it for the summer then garage it and buy a runabout for the winter I think.
So, am I happy?
Yes thank you.
It’s the first car I have ever had where a random stranger entered into a conversation about it – I was returning to the station car park yesterday and one of the guys working for the contractors refurbishing the car park came over as I was putting my trappings in the boot and said how it was the best preserved w124 he’d ever seen and wanted to know all about it. That’s definitely never happened before. He seemed a knowledgeable chap too and said he’d had an early w124 in the past but it had long since died of rust.
I think it still the shape looks good. Discuss. To me the form is pretty timeless, just not “modern”. It sits quietly and confidently in the works car park like a leather bound Dickens on a shelf of airport paperbacks. It doesn’t jostle for attention like some of the showier up-to-the-minute offerings with their alluring curves and me, me, me corporate fashion cues.
As to driving, well, it’s now become a bit of an occasion as opposed to a simple journey. I like the way the speedo needle can’t quite make its mind up until you are doing about 35 mph and it flits up and down like the speedo in my 1962 mini used to when I was about the same age this car is now. It settles down OK at motorway speeds but it’s hopelessly optimistic when compared to the GPS readout.
I quite like the smell of the interior. Who was it on Top Gear said they bought a car for its smell? When the guy who fitted the new radio (Blaupunkt Toronto with Bluetooth) was sat in it he said that with his eyes closed he’d be able to tell it was an old Merc. Is that true I wonder? The new radio is fine, paired with a phone without any profanity at all. It accepts SD cards too so I can have endless music. The car does need some new speakers. Open to suggestions here chaps.
There’s no need to drive fast in this car. It will show much newer cars a clean pair of metaphorical heels if required, but I reckon my average speed has dropped by about 10 mph on motorways and I have turned into something of a pootler on urban roads. Mind you, with oscillating speedo needle, your guess on the actual speed is as good as mine. I’m perfectly happy just proceeding calmly and carefully toward my destination.
For those who may be interested, it is presently giving an average of 29.7 mpg at 85% motorway 15% urban.
The engine has a pleasing tone. There is a satisfying chord when it starts and settles to tick-over (did I say it sometimes hunts a bit – the garage tells me it’s normal) and if you want to overtake on the motorway, anything above about 3000 rpm delivers a resonant, harmonic baritone that remains as background music and never dominates like 55s and 63s. Not that I find the modern AMG pipes unpleasant, it’s just a tune played on a different instrument.
Her Ladyship (who doesn't drink) borrowed it the other night for a girly night out taxi and as she was driving away there was a lovely key change as it shifted up.
The handling is better than I expected. Firm but not arduous like a BMW. I’ve not exactly explored the limits of grip, but when pushed it felt like it knew what it was doing and only needed me to hang onto the steering wheel. Nicely relaxed, no roll or drama. It has Pirelli tyres on at present and they are very noisy on motorways. There’s a thrum that sounds just like someone is drumming on the side-wall or there's a big ballbearing doing a roulette ball spin around the inside of tyre. I can’t describe it, but I’ll be glad when they are finished and I can get some other tyres.
The brakes are as good as my C280 but I suspect it will be needing some new disks before long. Perhaps it would be nice to get the calipers refurbished too.
The electric aerial is jolly entertaining. It rises in its own sweet time and just like me, it never quite achieves the same degree of erection as it did when it was younger. When the radio is turned off it lowers like a flag at sundown in about the same time as it takes to get out of the car and lock it. I’ve given it a spray of silicone lubricant but to very little effect. It needs some sort of telescopic Viagra I suspect.
The driving position is pretty well perfect and even Her Ladyship can get comfy. I’m not convinced she really gets this old car thing but she can see I’m happy so she humours me.
The seats are comfy but still supportive, they don’t appear to have sagged at all and the leather is nicely lived in and looks good.
What do I miss when compared with the fripperies available on modern machinery? The volume controls on the steering wheel for sure and the ability to change radio station, CD track, etc.
I miss that 3 flashes thing on the indicator for a flick of the stalk, oh and I miss the stalk being on the left – still.
I’ll miss it when the car tells you it wants a drink of oil and a service. Note to self – must get back into the habit of weekly checks. It probably actually uses some oil as well, so I’ll get some on my next trip to Costco. Just buy the traditional 10W 40, not the all singing all dancing super thin synthetic Mobil 1?
For sure there's a few minor faults that are to be fixed soon, but nothing that’s taken the shine off ownership. For peace of mind I bought the full 3 year warranty on it. It covers any single “claim” up to £2K so I hope that should cover most eventualities. It was very good value for money I though too.
There are a few tiny paint blemishes and stone chips I want touched up and maybe I'll get it valeted. Oh no, does this mean I'll be detailing it soon not just giving it a wash and some Autoglym.
I'll enjoy running it for the summer then garage it and buy a runabout for the winter I think.
So, am I happy?
Yes thank you.