I don't have the time or space for another project car and have left my '67 Volvo untouched for the better part of a month or two. So naturally when I saw a listing on marketplace for 150 W123 "parts cars" sitting in a cornfield outside of Indiana, PA I messaged the guy. The short version of the story is that his uncle was a Mercedes man through and through and acquired well over 150 (primarily W123 and W126) Mercedes that he stashed away in various places. Uncle passed on and the guy I dealt with was helping to liquidate the estate. After perusing the Facebook page he'd set up with pictures of all the cars I picked a wagon (an estate car from an estate of cars, get it?) that looked reasonably intact and unblemished and paypal'd the guy. A few days later my girlfriend, my truck, and a uhaul trailer were on location ready to see if we could get it to start.
The scene we were greeted with (actually taken after I extracted my car):
Many of these cars are truly parts cars. The remaining turbo wagons looked pretty worse for wear, the earlier cars were in better shape which is how I ended up picking this 1980:
I popped the hood and gave it a look over. There was diesel in the line filter and when I gave the primer a few pumps I could feel fuel pressure. There was no mouse nest in the intake. I put a charged battery in, glowed the plugs a few times (they worked!), and then this happened (with a little sniff of ether):
(Looks like you can't embed imgur video, here's a direct link): https://imgur.com/dgcSs0J
First start in... no one was sure! Somewhere between four and 13 years. I put it in gear and it went into both forward and reverse. Another buyer who was picking up a turbo 300CD pumped up the tires with a bike pump. Then I drove it right onto the trailer:
My Silverado towed it no problem, though some of those hills on 22 really kept my foot to the floor. After getting home I gave it a more thorough inspection. Looks like it had been sitting quite awhile:
The guy had given me a stack of paperwork including a notarized title, bill of sale, power of attorney declaration, etc... and I registered it today no problem. I did have to clean it up since I have to submit pictures to the state to get approved for antique registration. Here it is after a powerwash:
All in all, not bad for $900 I think. I've always wanted a 300TD but they're just not around here anymore. I don't have much of a plan so far; I'll do all filters and fluids to start, brakes and hoses, tires of course. The SLS and rear springs clearly need attention. The interior needs a THOROUGH cleaning as it has been home to mice for some time. The car was an Arizona car prior to my ownership and the paint is completely shot, it is chalky and was coming off when washed. It also looks like there was a low-quality collision repair done to the front end at some point. The only rust I've found (so far) is the area under the battery. The lower fender, wheel well, etc.. have some rot.
I have a friend with a rotted out 240 he'd like to get rid of and I'm curious about the manual transmission and manual HVAC controls, so that might be an idea... Mostly I'll just tinker around I think. Pointers and advice always welcome.