Voitures Anciennes

Somewhere for all our lovers and owners of classic vehicles to chat about and discuss classic vehicles in France. Also where members can share their recent adventures in their vehicle in and out of France.
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RobertArthur
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Joined: Sat Jul 17, 2021 3:10 pm
Location: Nièvre

Voitures Anciennes

#921 Post by RobertArthur »

The Mercedes W123 generation gained the reputation of being well built and reliable. Nothing wrong with reaching 500.000 kilometres or more. The only electronics: a radio. The rest: simple switches, relays, copper wiring, fusebox. No turbo, one Stromberg carburettor in the 200 petrol type. Low cost lights, easy to replace. Genuine bumpers. Very luxurious for me at the time: you could operate both side mirrors from the inside with a lever, without opening your side window, not possible in the 115 series ( picture 6). Incidentally, equipped with only one side mirror, front driver side. No electric motors in the 123 series mirrors, simple mechanics, maintenance free, but already a major step into the future, a must-have. There were proud owners of 115s who upgraded their cars with new front doors and these modern side mirrors, dedicated followers of fashion, keeping up with the Joneses. Mercedes Residence, lady of the house speaking... Road safety: no potentially dangerous recessed door handles, dependent on electricity and a functioning black box, a computer system, better known as the Electronic Control Unit (ECU).

Seeing many hybrids and EVs in a parking this afternoon I also saw, to my relief, one of my old friends.


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Hotrodder
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Voitures Anciennes

#922 Post by Hotrodder »

That is probably the one that is held in high esteem by almost every taxi driver in north Africa. Simplicity brings reliability and both of those factors keep running costs down for those who make a living behind the wheel. Like almost every other car maker they took on more and more complexity that needed more and more connectors, controllers, and miles of wires to operate. It would have been OK if the quality of these components was much higher instead of being built down to a price and then been better protected from moisture and corrosion that shortens its life.
On my headstone it will say: Please switch off mobile phones. I'm trying to get some sleep.

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RobertArthur
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Voitures Anciennes

#923 Post by RobertArthur »

@ Hotrodder, in one of the issues of the German magazine "Auto- und Motorsport" in the seventies there was an interview with the Mercedes CEO, a few years before his retirement. Headlines: "Nach 50.000 Kilometer soll ein Mercedes noch neuwertig dastehen." (After 50,000 kilometres, a Mercedes should still look as good as new).

A few years later new much younger managers made their entry in the top floor of the Mercedes headquarters. Type: bully vom oberen Stock. Were are producing cars for the older population, some of them already grandparents. Not sexy enough for our future clients. Let's rethink everything: first of all our cars are overengineered, built to last and full of traditional technology. More (electronic) gadgets please.

Fifteen years later I received a phone call from one of my colleagues, attending a conference in Berlin. From his hotel room, high above street level. Robert, there is a demonstration going on, down here. Taxi drivers with their once very reliable cars. You won't believe it, white sheets are attached to some of the roofs of the long and slow-moving procession, bearing the inscription: Mercedes, nie wieder (Mercedes, never again). A great deal of water must flow through the Rhine river and Spree river in Berlin before a German taxi driver expresses his dissatisfaction in this manner, the internet and social media did not yet exist.

Everything keeps moving, everything flows. Headlines this year, from a Mercedes expert: ‘Market-oriented positioning’ instead of luxury. Five years before: Mercedes-Benz has always stood for something special. We summed this up perfectly in the headline of our strategy at the end of 2020: “We build the most desirable cars in the world”.

To conclude: another king of the African road.

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Hotrodder
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Voitures Anciennes

#924 Post by Hotrodder »

Up to about 15 years ago I was looking after a holiday home owned by a German couple. One day they turned up in a BMW. I asked about it. They said their lifelong love affair with Mercedes had wained. They were just too full of faults to bother with. They decided the BMW was a worthy successor.
On my headstone it will say: Please switch off mobile phones. I'm trying to get some sleep.

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RobertArthur
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Voitures Anciennes

#925 Post by RobertArthur »

One of my Mercedes diesels, 115 series. This 220 D (1971) never let me really down. Manual transmission, a steering column gear, take your time. Nice touch, paradise by the dashboard light, not for those on the second row: a long bench seat. No power steering, strong arms. Special procedure to start the engine. Only one nice little side mirror, low air resistance, high top speed of 135 km/h possible with its 60 hp and about 1470 kg ..... Ready for the Boulevard des Anglais in Nice, already in Mediterranean blue.

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Polarengineer
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Voitures Anciennes

#926 Post by Polarengineer »

Having once been in the business (a very long time ago as a side earner) I would never buy a used car in that colour (blue). It was a favorite of the second hand respray car sellers as that colour did not let you see the ripples in the bodywork after a crash repair. I would go so far as to say that the front wing in that picture has suffered a bash at some time.

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