On Tue, 1 Oct 2019 13:49:47 -0400 Dan--- via Mercedes
wrote:
> Donald,
>
> Some suggestions:
>
> 1.) Stop. Take a few steps back and stop trying to solve the car’s
> (perceived) issues collectively. Taking a shotgun approach to a car
> that is new and unknown to you is rarely productive.
>
> 2
Take out to the highway. Stop. Get us a 0-60 time in seconds. If it
is over 18, your turbo is most likely not working due to the line from
the intake manifold to the fender being plugged up.
Donald Snook via Mercedes wrote on 10/1/19 1:02 PM:
It IS turbocharged.
Donald H. Snook
__
On Tue, 1 Oct 2019 13:49:47 -0400 Dan--- via Mercedes
wrote:
> Back to vacuum...
>
> There is a rather lengthy dissertation I wrote for Richarde’s mbz.org
> on adjusting and troubleshooting the vacuum system with the IP and
> transmission, I.e., modulator adjustment. If you can’t find it I’ll di
It IS turbocharged.
Donald H. Snook
> On Oct 1, 2019, at 11:54 AM, OK Don wrote:
>
> So it's not turbo charged? Then, yes, it will seem very slow compared to
> the 300D 2.5 T - that thing was like a rocket powered car relative to the
> previous MB Diesels!
>
> On Tue, Oct 1, 2019 at 11:08 AM
Donald,
Some suggestions:
1.) Stop. Take a few steps back and stop trying to solve the car’s (perceived)
issues collectively. Taking a shotgun approach to a car that is new and unknown
to you is rarely productive.
2.) Try to make a list of the issues. Pick one and resolve it, then move to the
My 300D 2.5t was,a rocket 0-60 in ~12/13 seconds. 240D was 22 seconds. Not
sure,about OM617 turbo.
Dwight Giles Jr.
Wickford RI
On Tue, Oct 1, 2019, 11:55 AM Donald Snook via Mercedes <
mercedes@okiebenz.com> wrote:
> It’s a 300D. It’s slow. But, not nearly as bad a 240D. The one time I
> drove
You can't drive it too hard, or rather if you do what broke was about to fail
anyway. A 240D has to be driven 100% almost all of the time, a 300D turbo is
babied by comparison.
I suspect your accelerator pedal isn't making the rack travel all the way. I
had that happen to my second 240D, theres
So it's not turbo charged? Then, yes, it will seem very slow compared to
the 300D 2.5 T - that thing was like a rocket powered car relative to the
previous MB Diesels!
On Tue, Oct 1, 2019 at 11:08 AM Curley McLain via Mercedes <
mercedes@okiebenz.com> wrote:
> what year 300D? I think it was an 8
what year 300D? I think it was an 82 or so. If so, it sounds like the
line form the intake manifold to the fender needs to be blown out with
air. WHil you are at it, blow out/ream out the fitting in the
manifold. Cheap fix.
You should fix the vacuum system first. some of the acc proble
It’s a 300D. It’s slow. But, not nearly as bad a 240D. The one time I drove one
of those it felt dangerously slow. Keep in mind, the last MB diesel I have
driven was my former 124 300D 2.5T and I remember thinking back then it was a
lot faster then my previous 123 diesel. So, maybe what I am e
> I’m wondering about the lack of power. Either I have forgotten how slow
these really are. Or, there is something wrong.
123 240D? Incredibly slow, as in: feels like there's something wrong. At
least, mine was.
Somebody had backed off the throttle limiter, I made it match (-ish) one of
the oth
What year/model was this? Plugged three way may be for the vacuum
locks. Vacuum line routing varies year to year and sometimes within
the year.. You need the specific diagram for that vehicle.
It should never go into second at 60. It could go into third.
Sunvalley website has vacuum dia
Anybody have an actual picture (rather than the diagram) of the vacuum line
routing? I think there should be 3 lines going into the switchover valve. But,
I have 1 or 2. I also have a 3 way connector that only has two hoses going
into it.
I remember something about one line that a lot of peop
+1 Save yerse'f the trouble. Replace the vavuum modulator, and any
other bad rubber components. the tubing rarely goes bad, and if so,
the engine compartment tubing gets brittle first.
Jim Cathey via Mercedes wrote:
Shot of brake cleaner into the line, compressed air to blow it through a
duh... Maybe you need a new mechanic. Atf in vacuum line is
EASY diagnosis. You need a vacuum modulator on the trans. You can
DIY. No "indy" needed.
clay monroe via Mercedes wrote:
The SD shut off issue, though maybe, probably related to the ignition (swapped
in new) was not res
Shot of brake cleaner into the line, compressed air to blow it through and
out.
Clean!
-- Jim
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The line is readily available, but I don't know what the price is. Many of my
instruments at work use it.
Peter
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The SD shut off issue, though maybe, probably related to the ignition (swapped
in new) was not resolved that way. I took the car to the indy for greater
diagnosis. He found much vacuum trouble. Maybe the green modulator is bad,
but when he was doing the vac testing, ATF was being sucked into
Jim Cathey wrote:
Greens
are HVAC of some sort. Yellow/brown would have been a door
locking reservoir line. This is a 116, right?
-- Jim
Yes it is. We suspect someone rearranged the lines to make something
work that they needed and left others dangling. We'd like "everything"
to work
Greens are HVAC of some sort. Yellow/brown would have been a door
locking reservoir line. This is a 116, right?
-- Jim
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Our 300 SD (1980) has 2 vacuum lines coming through the firewall that
were never connected to anything since we've had the car. 1 is green
with black line and 1 is yellow with a brown line. Can't find reference
in my cd of these colors and what components they should make work.
There are severa
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