Beautiful w115 body 240d. I've been wrenching on old diesel mercedes for years now. I have an 83 240d thats my daily. Im glad you adjusted the valves and changed the fuel filters, thats a step to getting as much power out of a 240d as possible lol. Be sure to clean the fuel tank strainer, do a diesel purge, install new rebuilt injectors, check the operation of the lift pump and ensure there are no air leaks from any of the fuel lines, pull the overfueling banjo bolt out and check how stretched out the spring is, go through the glow plug system, and do an idle adjustment. After all of that, your car should purr like a kitten at idle and have gobs of power if the engine is not worn out. Be sure to check your vacuum pump as well, if it fails it can jettison metal into the timing chain and wreck the engine. Also citric acid flush the cooling system just to be on the safe side (very effective flush to remove scale and deposits) the back end of your car is sagging, install new coil springs, coil spring pads, and differential mount and it should be back to stock ride height. Also 4 new bilstein shocks will make that car float down the road. And lastly be sure to ensure the throttle linkage, vacuum control valve, kickdown solenoid, and vacuum modulator on the transmission are all adjusted properly so the car shifts right and actually has power to get out of its own way. Good luck and be sure to check out the peachparts forum and mercedessource website for parts and tutorials on the older diesel mercedes.
No matter what a person is into, your video content and presentation is honestly some of the very best on RU-vid. Don't change a thing because your videos rock. And here is some old guy, been there seen that advice about the mouse clean up. I was present at an autopsy of a girl about your age who had cleaned out a farm shed. She felt fine when she finished, 3 days later, she was dead from hantavirus. She drowned in her own body fluids. A spray bottle with half water and half bleach and spray the heck out of the area. Soak it. It's the disease in the dust particles that get in your respiratory system and destroys it. Anyway, climbing off the soap box now and thanking you for original, great content.
Wow, thank you very much for the tip. I had no idea hantavirus is that serious. I've heard ozone generators will kill it and get rid of the smell, so I think I'll try that.
@@SimonFordmana buddy of mine almost died from Spinal Meningitis. Also from cleaning up and rat poop caked areas in an old vehicle.. Dude is forever disabled from it. VERY few people survive it. Cleaning up rodent messes is seriously hazardous.
Cripes, that is a good heads up on the mouse virus of which I was totally unaware. I am going to remember the spray bottle tip! Also second the comments re the content!
I was a newborn when that Mars candy was being made. The car was already 16 years old at the time. Now I am a balding dude saving for retirement. Really drives home how old these cars are. Keep up the good work and videography. Filming and editing makes everything take longer, thank you! You will soon be able to make a living doing this.
I drove a 240 D here in Germany for about 10 years. Apart from regular maintenance, it hasn't had a single repair during that time and rust hasn't been an issue either. It was one of the first and best vehicles I've had over the decades. The seating comfort was like driving in your living room armchair. Thanks for the great video, it brought back old memories
Great job! As one of the other comments stated " A nice simple approach to fixing a vehicle". I'm very pleased that you have no music in the video. I like to hear the sounds of work being done, hearing screws, bolts, and nuts falling through the vehicle frame.
Oh, my! You are fixing up The World's Slowest Premium Sedan, Ever (copyright)! Good for you. If there is any vehicle that could be made to last forever, or is more deserving, this must be the one.
Here in Europe, we had the 200 D with only 55 hp. Compared to that, the 240 D with its 65 hp is a real beast.😅 I know what I am talking about. I had a 200 D back in the late 1980s and still have my 1976 240 D. By the way, both were the same colour as the car in this video (caledonia green).
My grandfather had one of these in the 90s, most of my childhood was spent driving around with him. Thanks for the video, it brought back a lot of memories.
I had a 1973 220D and in my opinion the W115 is a far more interesting car than the W123. The small knob under the speedometer is the manual idle speed control. If you turn the headlight switch to the far LEFT, the left parking(standing) lights will illuminate, one click back and the rights will light. Only with the key off. Pull the headlight knob out and the front fog lights will light, if it has them of course. Euro-spec cars had provisions for a rear, bright fog light(in the taillight housing) but not in the USA because we were far too dumb to understand the difference between a rear fog lamp and a "stuck brake light". That's only 62hp and a steep enough grade will find you in low gear LOL. I think it needs the injectors rebuilt but it's a sweet car. Treat the rust if you keep it. PS be glad you didn't attempt to replace the heater blower motor. It's somewhere in the dash but nobody really knows where. They started with the blower motor and built the rest of the car around it.
1980s Range Rover and 1989 to 1994 Landrover Discovery had an extremely hidden heater motor,big job to get heater unit out from centre of dash and then worse still to split plastic heater box to access blower motor...
I really enjoy your No~Nonsense videos, just an absolute pleasure to sit back an enjoy your work in fixing & repairing all those Vehicles. Thank you for taking us along your wonderful journeys ❤
Seeing you really go through this car methodically shows how they are famous for hitting a million miles. Build quality is insane even if left to rot, they can still come back and live again. Awesome work. Amazing Mercedes.
This brings back memories. I had a 1972 220D, dark green with a tan interior. It required weekly repairs at 250,000 miles! Drove it from CT to FL and back, adding oil all the way with that tired 4 cylinder. Similar dash and engine, the joy of glow plugs and lots of chasing electrical and brake problems. I gave it to a friend at 300,000 miles and he swapped in a gasoline engine. Sad. Miss the beast. We called it "The Powerless Puffer." Good memories.
Simon, Your video's remind me of when I was a kid in the 60's and 70's. We had little to repair our vehicles with and had to repair many parts and use them till they were completely wore out, and then go to the junk yard to get used parts most of the time. Watching your video's has reminded me that I dont always have to throw new parts at a build and many times the old parts are better than the Chinesium that we get at the parts stores anyway. I started with a 1967 Galaxie 500 and learned many repairs on it, from brakes to valves. I just finished up a build on a 1989 Chevy K2500; got the engine changed out last year and am now fixing all the little stuff. It seems that it was leaking from every system in the truck. Many times it just needed cleaned and new seals. From watching your video's, however, I am cleaning and repairing much of the fixes, rather than throwing new parts at it. Thanks for the vid's. Frank
Really satisfying Simon, to see you get the faults repaired and the vehicles back to life. I really like to see your basic approach, to make these trucks and cars useable again and not just scrap metal. Keep it up.
Очень сочная картинка! Спасибо товарищ :) Бесконечно можно смотреть на три вещи : как течёт вода, как горит огонь и как этот парень чинит старую тачку. Жаль прошлых владельцев этого Мерседеса, которых ты выбросил в ведро))
I love your kind of doing videos. It's so relaxing to watch and no stupid talking. Just you taking care of the car. I'd love to have one of these old Mercedes. Here in Germany they've become collectibles.
The no-nonsense video production style makes your videos easy to watch. The viewer is focusing on what YOU are focusing on and nothing else. You have a respectable skill set- both as a mechanic and videographer.
She's lovely, and a nicely formatted video. Back in the day, when manuals told you what the valve lash should be. Today, the manuals say "don't drink the battery acid". Nicely done.
That cleaning marathon, excellent exhaust effort then fixing the rattly speedometer surround! Wonderful. The bit that took me back was the stitching to the air vent gaiter. My mother was a seamstress, by trade and I can imagine she would have said 'Oooo he's a good lad, fair play'.😊. Great to watch, as usual. with your talents and tools, the old Mercedes is coming back to life.
You brought the Mercedes back to life again in a good, professional manner, and you were successful in doing so. Your photography was high-resolution, so you deserve appreciation for all the wonderful work you did. Well done.
Cool man, thanks! I watch every video of yours! My brother had one from the 80s, also with a diesel engine. I was a young guy in the early 90s, such a car was rare in the newly independent country of Kazakhstan! And for me, such a Mercedes E-Class was a dream, which I later realized, but it was a Mercedes already in the 124 body. Keep going Simon!
Good evening Simon In Germany, we called this Mercedes Benz car „Strich Acht“ - my first car in the 80´s. Popular by Farmers. Solid Diesel Performance with 55 HP and 135 km/h max. Thank you for your interesting video and Greatings from North West Germany
Can't tell you how much I love the videos and filming style. The Ford F250 series of videos are my fav so far. Along with the trip to the salvage yard. I watch these multiple times. Always look forward to seeing what you're working on next. Mike
First of all it is amazing to see these old cars still in service. I remember the days when they were all over on the roads. Secondly, it is pure fun to watch a person who knows exactly what he has to do. Well done. 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻😊😊🇩🇪
That's just great! Nice to see you putting your energy into the old Mercedes and leaving it in a much better place. No longer a junker and now ready to be further improved. Greatly enjoyed watching you do your magic.
New subscriber and IG follower from Argentina, also here a Mercedes lover, I really enjoyed your video as I haven't done in quite some time. Nice shootings, no words, just work and love for the project. Congratulations, keep doing more content like this.
Great stuff as usual man, keep doing EXACTLY what You like doing. Small piece of advice to save You some bread on spray cleaners like brakleen and carb cleaner and such; grap one or two of those refillable aerosol dispensers tjey sell at O'reillys or Harbor Freight. They're $30 or so a piece, but thry will save You an absolute FORTUNE on those products. Laquer thinner or MEK accomplish the same job, and bought by thr gallon arr sometimes 5x cheaper than the spray cans.. Same for lubes like Cat Piss ( b'laster) WD40 and so on. All can be bought by thr gallon or bigger and will save You stacks..
That’s a fantastic idea. I honestly had no idea that refillable aerosol cans were a thing, that’s awesome. Thanks for the tip. I hate buying all that brakleen
Seen one of these Mercedes at a rest stop on the Pennsylvania turnpike ,silver in color ,with Muhammed Ali and his lady friend back in the 70's ,beautiful car a real touring sedan.
I was almost expecting a mouse to come out of the air cleaner job... good to see a North Dakota car! An old friend had one just like this one only brown. I like the light green way better though.
Your thoroughness is outstanding. Hats off to the volk who designed and engineered this car; ja das ist gut! Mouse house; at least you didn’t find significant corrosion from their urine. The extra layer of carpet no doubt helped.
I had to laugh at the rear seat cushion cleaning. It shows how tough the MB-Tex really is. Then I realized you have the same color that my 1972 280 SE 4.5 has. Unusual interior color for a Benz. It is in storage and I havent seen it in years. Have to get it soon! Thanks for the video, good work.
That car is happy to be in good hands. Great video on all the work you’ve done to it to get it cleaned up and back on the road. The air and oil filters on these sure are messy and awkward, and then there is that evil blower motor buried in the dash. And the dreaded horse hair seat stuffing! I am trying to get mine back on the road after 7 years sitting and it runs and moves but I will have to do many of these same things to it, so thanks for the good video guide!
I've had a couple dozen Mercedes, had to battle rust and electric gremlins and all the regular headaches having lived in Boston area, just went through a 75 240D, live in TN now, this one has ZERO rust but had all the mechanical problems being a non finished project, it is now in quite good shape and is also that color green, oh how nice it was to work on a car like this with ZERO rust.
Oh man, I got that little black Mercedes book too! Those things are very handy! Nice find love the car I commuted 68 miles one way every day and a 79 240 D for about three years 10 years ago love that car so beautiful it was immaculate. I bought it from the original owners, but it was slow. I didn’t care. I just set the cruise on 65 and just stay in the slow lane and it was a wonderful commuter car. This one is awesome.
I've owned a lot of MKercedes and I even had a W115 240D like that ,same colour etc .Mine was from Outback Australia and I thought it could rust free but it was rotten, ( unknown to me,the xcar was from Brisbane where it possibly went underwater in the 1974 flood..)so the power train went into a W110 Station wagon I had. The engine and trans ran perfectly ran perfectly.The rest of the car became a parts donor .
I had and restored a '72, 220D. If your headlights do not flash (passing mode) unscrew the fuse block under the hood. There may be a spare wire tucked in there. Simply connect that wire to the headlight terminal and you can now flash your headlights. Turning the headlight switch to the left will generally turn on your standing lights, when parked on the roadside. The appropriate setting is to turn on the light closest to the lane of travel. I your glow plug bus bars are heavy gauge (8?), they can take up to 45 sec to glow in cold weather. Replace with the rapid start plugs and smaller gauge wire, which cuts down the glow time significantly. Mine was black with burgundy. Love this body style. Narragansett Bay
I drove a very similar 240d for many years before the floor pan rusted out completely. Great cars! Well done on the video, glad to see this historical piece back out on the road!
I grew up with a 74 and an 84 MB 240D as well as an 86 300D. Takes me back hearing the sound haha. My 85 year old grandpa just finished restoring his 74 by himself. He bought it in Germany in 74, took his young family on a roadtrip around Germany so the car would be considered used.. making it cheaper to ship back to the US. The car is a turtle when it comes to speed but it’s tough!
wonderful video that I really enjoyed very much watching in full. Good job taking care of this W115. I like how you created the video, without music, without talking, it's so peaceful. You seem to really know what you are doing. Weeks and months of work appear as if you did it in a couple of days. Best Regards from Germany!
Another great video, editing, and showing the work. This is now my favorite channel. Many channels talk more about the work than actually doing anything.
Man, the videography and editing, with all the crisp sounds, highlighted by the countless camera angles made for a really great video. Well done! Love that old Benz too.👍
Amazing video! The guy had record number of dead mice in his car. Also the rattling noise was almost irritating, I thought he would correct that as well!
I would bet that dead mouse stench would come out with the help of an ozone generator! I’m about to get one to get the stench out of my ‘98 Escort from the lady I bought it from. Stinks like cigarettes and cheap perfume - ugh!
Hell yeah Simon good find on that Mercedes 240D that's a good find brother it sounds a little rough but I know you'll get it running good let me know if you still want to get rid of that gray Ford I'm interested keep up your good work brother
Hey man, I am Sweden and love your videos.. I am a traveller and the only thing i like when i am done from the day, i wait for your video and watch it while relaxing..
Excellent job Simon. If I owned it I would have to change that interior color ! Did my 1967 Camaro - red interior - to black in 1972. So much nicer. Vinyl paint has come a long way since tnen !
I just stumbled across your channel. My first impression: Recording and editing are professional and artistically appealing. Very unusual for this kind of content. Then there's the car itself. If you look at the workmanship and the plug connections of the rear light as an example, and consider that all this was developed in the 50s and 60s and built until the end of the 70s. The drive train lasts forever ( unfortunately not the body ), and the chassis and brakes don't feel like a classic car even today. It's just very, very slow, a bit like an over-the-counter tranquilizer on wheels. I had the pleasure of owning a W123 200D from 1977 over 30 years ago. 55hp and the same starting procedure as yours. It had a manual transmission, was still super slow, but that only bothered the cars behind me ;-) Greetings from Germany