Hello, all! My big bro passed along the link to this post, so I figured I'd become a member and join in on the discussion so you can get all the info first hand. (I haven't posted there in a while since I've been really busy with work, but I am also a member over at BenzWorld.org, so if you check over there I have a bit more history on the car as well... My username over there is 85BabyBenz.)
So anywho, formalities out of the way... the car is a 1985 190E with the 2.3L 8-valve 4 cylinder and a 5 speed manual. I specifically bought the car because of the manual transmission. I've owned the car for about a year and 3 months now. The engine ran great when I first bought it, but it leaked oil a lot and I kept having to add about a quart in-between oil changes. During that time, I had brought the car to a few different shops for various things (tires, alignment, etc...), including the local Mercedes Benz dealer (Keeler Motor Car). They all said the car was leaking oil bad and it looked like it was coming out of the back of the head and they suspected a bad head gasket. Well, as time went on, the oil leak kept getting worse and worse... Then I was adding in about a quart every week or two, depending on how much I drove it.
Over this past winter, the upper radiator hose blew out on me while I was driving and I had to get that fixed ASAP. It seemed totally random and the rest of the hose seemed in good shape and I thought it very odd that it just ripped open a like 1-2 inch gash in the middle of the hose. I kept driving it after I replaced the radiator hose and topped off the coolant.
Around April or so, I was checking the coolant level in the overflow tank and noticed the coolant looked creamy, like there was oil in it. I figured the head gasket got bad enough that it started pushing oil into the coolant passages in the block. At this point, I knew it needed a head gasket and I didn't have the time, tools, or knowledge to try to tackle it myself. I started researching shops in the area that specialize in foreign (European) cars and I stopped by about 4 different shops that all said they specialize in BMW's, Mercedes', Porsche's, Volkswagens, and other German cars. I first took the car to see "The Bavarian Rocket Scientists" (I sh1t you not! That is the name of their shop in downtown Albany...) However, they primarily seem to work on high-end Porsche's and BMW's (as well as some Mercedes'), but they didn't seem very interested in working on my 190E and they quoted me an astronomical number of close to $5,000 just to do a head gasket job on the car, so I figured they didn't want to bother with my rinky-dink little Benz...
Long story short(ened a bit?), I ended up taking it to Capital Mechanics in Speigletown (just north of Troy, NY). I had stopped into his shop 3 times over a month or so and talked at length with the owner about my car before I decided to bring it to him. He seemed to know his stuff and he bullsh1tted me enough to make me think that this was the guy who would do justice to my car and get it fixed the right way. (Not necessarily the cheap way - but I wanted it done right.) He does work on a lot of older Mercedes', BMW's, VW's, and Saab's. Oddly enough, he said he originally started his shop as a Saab specialist and he had so many people asking him to work on Mercedes' and other German cars that he just became an all-around European specialist shop. Granted, the owner looks too old to be actually working on cars anymore (he is an old Russian guy, looks to be in his mid-60's at least?), so all the work on my car was done by one of his guys in his shop that is a Mercedes mechanic (supposedly).
So, he did all of the work on the car that my brother already outlined above (that is second-hand from me telling him over text messaging yesterday). I just picked up the car Wednesday of this week and he handed me a bill for $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ to fix the car. My jaw about dropped to the floor. Granted, after he did the head job on it and got the engine put all back together, it would hardly run at all for some reason. He kept checking different things and he outlined some of the potential issues that could be causing it. First, he thought the exhaust could be plugged up and causing the engine to not run right. However, this was the same exhaust that was on the car since I bought it and the engine never seemed to lack power before. Still, he cut off the old exhaust and put in brand-new piping from the end of the manifold back along with a new muffler. He showed me the cat in the car was a cheap universal one that was replaced at some point and it was much smaller than the OEM cat. It was partially plugged, but you could still see light through it. Then he showed me the resonator, which looked like it was coated with a mixture of used gear oil and carbon deposits and was almost totally plugged up. It looked nasty inside. Still, just the exhaust alone tacked on an extra $650-$700 to my repair bill which I wasn't expecting.
Then it STILL wasn't running right after that, so he put a timing light on it and noticed that the timing wasn't advancing at all when you reved the engine. The vacuum advance was shot on the old distributor, so he put in a reman ignition distributor, which was another $200 or so for that. Once that issue was resolved, he told me to stop in and test drive it to see if the car drove like this before or if it still had an issue. The car idled fine, but when I went to drive it down the road, I was almost rear-ended pulling out of his parking lot because the car just fell on its face when you gave it any throttle and it would not accelerate to save its life. I said no way was it ever this bad before when I was driving it!
So, he thought it was having a problem delivering fuel. He pulled the injectors out and cleaned them and made sure they were spraying okay. He said the injectors seemed fine and were not an issue. Then he diagnosed that there was an issue with the fuel distributor and he thought a diaphragm in there went bad or got a pin hole in it and it is causing a drop in fuel pressure so the injectors aren't delivering enough fuel when there is a high demand. So, he had me get a used fuel distributor for it since that part is hard to find and a new one will run over $1,200-$1,400 easily from Bosch.
I had a guy out in the New Milford, CT area that I had bought parts for my car from before, so I called him up and asked if he had a spare fuel distributor I could get from him. He said he parted out a manual shift 190E a few months ago to a guy who wanted to convert his auto to a stick and he had the engine for the car still. He said he drove the car before he pulled the engine and transmission out of it and it drove fine through all the gears and through the rev range, so he said he knew the fuel distributor was good. I paid $120 for the entire assembly - the air meter flap housing, fuel distributor, fuel pressure regulator, etc... he even gave me all the fuel injector lines with it, which if you look on eBay, most other @$$holes just cut the lines off at the connectors to the fuel distributor... >:-(
So, I brought this to the "mechanic" (to keep with my brother's theme here...) Monday morning of this past week when he opened up and his guy swapped them out and the car ran much better than it did before. Then on Wednesday he called me up and said my car was done, I headed up there, he handed me a HUUUUUGE bill (Damn you, Billy Fuccillo!!!) and I drove the car home. I called him back on Thursday to tell him it STILL wasn't running right as it seems to hesitate when you give it gas and especially when trying to take off in 1st gear, which is very annoying. He told me that it is probably the throttle position sensor that got some oxidation on it from sitting and it just needs to be driven a few 100 miles or so and hopefully it will sort itself out. If it doesn't, then maybe that part will need to be replaced as well. He also said to put some fresh gas in it as the tank was almost empty and run some fresh gas through it to see if it will improve. He also thought it could be an issue with the 5th "enrichening injector" in the intake manifold, which gives it extra gas to help with cold starting as well as extra fuel when you floor it.
So, I stopped by my local Sunoco station and filled the tank with 93 octane fuel (which is all I run in the car). I also added a little StarTron fuel additive for the Ethanol and even put in half a bottle of SeaFoam in the tank as well for best results. I've since put about 70-80 miles on it the last few days (I do drive a lot for work...) and it is STILL acting up, so I don't think it is a problem that will "fix itself" with time...
Could it be that those fuel distributors are uniquely tuned to each car and you can't just swap them around without having to tune them to the engine? Maybe there is more tuning and tinkering that needs to be done to make the engine run right? It is STILL not running as well as it did when I first bought the car over a year ago and I figure with all of the work done to the car and all the money I've thrown at it, it should run like a brand-new car and it doesn't. I'm not very happy with it right now and I'm frankly very, VERY disappointed with the mechanic, especially after all my interviewing shops and I had figured that this was the guy who was going to do the best work on my car... Boy, was I mistaken...
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(P.S. - Sorry I wrote a novel about my car, but I figure more information is better so you can get the whole picture... There is nothing I hate more on forums then when noobs post, "My car is broken, what's wrong?" and they don't tell you what it is doing, lol...)