|
|

117 / 560SL Engine Dress-Up
A dedicated laborers experiences at putting
on the polish!

I know that purists will not like this, but
I finally finished my dress-up stuff as far as I'm going to go. I had
earlier buffed out (with a buffing machine and industrial polishes,
wheels, and bits) the valve covers and air cleaner. I don't drive my car
in the winter, and never deliberately in rain; my experience has been
that a thin coat of oil (just about any oil) once in a while will help
keep aluminum looking nice.
The air cleaner was fairly easy (but with a few pits I didn't remove);
the valve covers were not easy - the castings are pretty rough (it seems
that later valve covers are less rough, as I did two sets). My results
with valve covers aren't perfect, but you can see yourself in them. If
you buy spares for yourself, look for cracks. Jumped timing chains are
the usual cause of damage on these cars, and that's why a lot of
valve covers in the junkyard are cracked (particularly the left one).
I did the fan, which was very difficult (in fact, I did two) and seems
to be made of an aluminum alloy that corrodes quickly. I sprayed wheel
clear over it shortly after re-polishing the second time. I did not go
to extremes on them to remove pits because I was concerned about
strength and balance. As far as I can tell, I did not significantly
affect the balance of the fans (been using one for more than a year with
no ill effects to the fan clutch or water pump).
With all my polishing, my goal was not "show only" quality, just very
good quality. The amount of work to produce truly "Show quality, shave
in it" aluminum polishing is exponentially greater than what I did here.
In the second and final phase, I
polished:
The water pump - a very difficult and
nasty job due to the odd shapes and nooks and crannies. After
replacing my original water pump, I polished up my old, non-leaking
(yet) pump for practice, and I liked it; then I bought another one,
polished it, and put it back on. Then I polished up the one with
about 3K miles on it. The upper and side fittings (the top neck and
thermostat housing) were also polished. The side one was easy, the
upper one was very difficult. BTW, the temperature sensors on top
polish up brass very nicely!
The power steering pump lid - I think that this is made out of cast
zinc, and not very well turned. I don't have a lathe, so I took a
screw and nut, "bolted" it to the chuck of my $40 drill press, and
let it rip, sanding it with various sandpapers, finishing with
wetordri and polishing. Once this was done, it really polished up
nicely - at first, it was the worst looking thing I had polished;
now, it's the best.
The alternator mount - a VERY rough casting, took a lot of work. I
polished the one on my car and a spare.
The distributor-a nice casting, very easy, except for the nooks and
crannies. Actually, I did two of them.
The alternator - This is surprisingly easy once you remove the
pulley and get the case apart (which took an impact screwdriver).
The castings are actually very smooth. I also replaced the
regulator/brush assembly. I had purchased an upgraded 80A alternator
which is a little bigger and and is tight, but it does fit; the
newer alternator uses lugs and studs/nuts for connection, not a
plug; I had to rewire this connection (not difficult, but a PITA to
route the wiring through the insulation jacketing). After doing
this, I polished, re-regulated, and had chromed the pulley/fan of
the original alternator. Naturally, I used the handy European mm
cross section to English AWG converter at the beginning of the 107
manual's electrical section when sizing the wiring.
The accelerator servo - not too difficult with the small polishers
and dremel; the domed part is steel, contains the magnets for the
servo motor, and I don't think it could be chromed; I polished it.
We will see if I can keep rust off of it (See below). I wanted to
see how these worked, so I acquired two spares, which I also
polished and tested.
The very last thing I did (not pictured)
was polish the power steering pump itself (later 107's had aluminum
pump housings). This, of course, was insane; it took about a day of
work with the tools that I have available, but I did it! The casting
was actually much worse than it initially appeared to be. Removing
the pulley was extremely difficult; I destroyed a cheap $40 tool
before buying the proper $80 tool to remove it with. I removed the
nameplate carefully by lifting it with a thin stainless steel blade
and wiggling the pins out. I managed to lose the pins, so I screwed
the nameplate back in in a "self-tapping" manner with screws. I
haven't seen this done elsewhere.
CAUTION:

When messing with the accelerator servo area, go through the manual and
re-verify the adjustment of the linkage and the dressing of your plug
wires. I know this because my throttle STUCK!!
I had chromed:
The front engine lift hook
The alternator adjusting arm
The water pump and power steering pump pulleys, nuts
The alternator fan and pulley (actually, the "pulley" is two
pieces), and nut
The accelerator servo mount. I also replaced the rubber isolation
doughnuts and the rubber mount underneath; getting those doughnuts
in took near-boiling water and a lot of swearing.
The heat shields - one is very easy to remove/install, the other
requires lifting out the EGR; I bought another gasket for this
purpose. They look nice, but now the exhaust manifolds look
comparatively worse. Well, maybe next year I'll have then jet-hot
coated.
I had the plaiting company attempt to plate the lower pulley.
Apparently, it's at least partially stamped, and contains hollows and
voids that make it nearly impossible to drain. So, I just repainted it.
Maybe someday see if I can solve this by
carefully drilling in a few strategic places.
I polished all the bolts and hose clamps (pretty sure the clamps are
stainless) to a shine. Now, as far as I know, these bolts and nuts are
steel, but they polished up to something beyond what you would expect.
I've kept a few that I waxed in water for a few days as an experiment,
and they didn't rust. I have reason to believe that these MB bolts (at
least of this era) were high-strength steel and might not be easily
prone to rust due to the alloys used. Polishing them to a chrome-like
shine may also make the surface somewhat non-porous, which probably
helps. My engine doesn't leak oil anymore, but certainly there's usually
some oil vapor going on in most 20 year old engine compartments. At
least, I hope that this is true - I polished up the distributor gear
access cover and the AC idler pulley, and they are made of this steel as
far as I can tell.
Was this worth it? Frankly, no, although (even including tools and
supplies) I spent a lot more time than money. You can't see all that
much of it, and the windshield washer bottle gets in the way of the best
parts! In the future, I MAY relocate/replace the bottle to where the
battery would be mounted in the engine compartment. This would also
allow me to put in the right hand cold-air inlet (I have the parts to do
this with, a "right-handed" inlet to the air cleaner body from a 560
SEC, a hose, etc, but no room). This might be worth a few HP.
|
The author of this page assumes no
liability based on information contained herein - zip, zilch, nada.
© Copyright
NorthernResource.Com 2007-2008 All Rights Reserved
|