I recall seeing a car similar to that in a Mercedes collector book I checked
out in a book store. Seems that the car wasn't officially imported to the
states, but a few were brought in by collectors
Kevin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, Sep 21, 2005 at 09:11:09PM -0500, OK Don wrote:
You
Looks real enough to me. Pretty cool. Would love to tool around in
that
On Wednesday, September 21, 2005, at 07:03 PM, Kaleb C. Striplin wrote:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/Mercedes-Benz-200-Series-Diesel-1974-
220D-MBZ-Diesel-Wagon-Exceedingly-Rare-Euro-
You REALY need that for your paper route!
I think I've seen a picture of a 115 wagon in a book, and remember
reading about such things in the paper 115 manual - long ago. There
was an ambulance version also -- --
On 9/21/05, Kaleb C. Striplin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Not factory. It is most likely a Binz conversion.
Where is John Green when we need him?
Aussies had to be independent and set up their own list go
figger... independent Aussies!
At 09:03 PM 9/21/2005, you wrote:
On Wed, Sep 21, 2005 at 09:11:09PM -0500, OK Don wrote:
You REALY need that for your paper route!
I think I've seen a picture of a 115 wagon in a book, and remember
reading about such things in the paper 115 manual - long ago. There
was an ambulance version also -- --
Saw an ambulance 115
Marshall Booth wrote:
Kaleb C. Striplin wrote:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/Mercedes-Benz-200-Series-Diesel-1974-220D-MBZ-Diesel-Wagon-Exceedingly-Rare-Euro-Model_W0QQitemZ4577410639QQcategoryZ6329QQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem
Mercedes didn't make the chassis of wagons before the 123 TD as far as