On Jan 17, 2006, at 5:38 PM, Christopher McCann wrote:
ALSO, I had enough of my oozing (in summer) and crustaceous (in
winter) rear view mirror and replaced it. You had mentioned you'd
never seen one (I think), so if you want this one for
experimentation/dissection/curio/whatever, jus
I think GM should come out with a new model that would be all too apropos;
the Hummer HIV
On 1/17/06, OK Don <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> ROTFLMAO !
>
> > >
> > > A 126 300TD would have been great. oh well.
> >
> > A 300STD?
Casey
Olympia, WA
Biodiesel: "I drive in a persistent vegetative
ROTFLMAO !
> >
> > A 126 300TD would have been great. oh well.
>
> A 300STD?
>
--
OK Don, KD5NRO
Norman, OK
'90 300D 243K, '87 300SDL 290K, '81 240D 173K, '78 450SLC 67K, '97
Ply Grand Voyager 78K
Dave M. wrote:
The letters differ depending on if you are referring to them as a
model number suffix (300TE is a gasser wagon), or as a chassis prefix
(S124 is a wagon). Here's the list of chassis prefixes that I know of:
W = sedan (W124, 300E)
S = wagon (S124, 300TE)
C = coupe (C124, 300CE)
A =
:-)
+dm
> --
> Date: Tue, 17 Jan 2006 15:15:25 -0800 (PST)
> From: Christopher McCann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: [MBZ] 300?TD/TE W126...did it ever exist?
>
>
> ah, good to know, thanks. W126, S124I think I can keep that strai
"Mercedes Discussion List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, January 18, 2006 9:53 AM
Subject: Re: [MBZ] 300?TD/TE W126...did it ever exist?
Yes - PersonnenKraftWagen...kraft means strength...maybe it means something
else too...? But PKW would include ALL passenger cars, but no
Yes - PersonnenKraftWagen...kraft means strength...maybe it means something
else too...? But PKW would include ALL passenger cars, but not trucks or
busses. minivans...don't know.
Chris
Loren Faeth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Just to confuse matters even more, in
German MB factories cars
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Just to confuse matters even more, in German MB factories cars are referred
to as PKW (personnenwagon I think)
And we always thought our German cousins were SO organized! (Maybe that is
just trains)
Loren
Lotsa MBs
At 04:38 PM 1/17/2006, you wrote:
interesting, I thought W just automatic
A wagon is also known as an S123 or S124, while sedans are W123 or W124.
On 1/17/06, Christopher McCann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> interesting, I thought W just automatically preceded every chassis number.
> So, to get this straight, my 300SD is a W126, but my 87 300TD is a 124?
Casey
Olympia
Christopher McCann wrote:
>
> A 126 300TD would have been great. oh well.
A 300STD?
interesting, I thought W just automatically preceded every chassis number.
So, to get this straight, my 300SD is a W126, but my 87 300TD is a 124?
A 126 300TD would have been great. oh well.
ALSO, I had enough of my oozing (in summer) and crustaceous (in winter) rear
view mirror and
Christopher McCann wrote:
subject line says it all.
The W stands for sedan/coupe. R for roadster, T for transporter (wagon)
in the old notation system (starting in the early '90s everything went
CRAZY). The is NO such thing as W123/124 wagon! It would be a 123/124 T,
not a W123/124 T. I don'
subject line says it all.
Thanks
Christopher McCann, Squier Park, Kansas City, Missouri
-2005 Blue Point Siamese, "Rose"
-1992 Volkswagen Golf, diesel, 185K km, "Nanook"
-1987 300TD, 151K, "Rotkäppchen"
-1985 300SD, 211K, "Wulf"
-1976 240D, ?K, "AKP-Wagen" (Alternativen Kraftstoffs Prüf
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