Doylestown Auto Repair

Junkyard Gem: 1971 Mercedes-Benz 250C is now a rat’s final resting place

Audi Repair Shop Doylestown
Call 267 279 9477 to schedule a appointment

The

Mercedes-Benz W114

, produced for the 1968 through 1976 model years, was the ancestor of the

present-day E-Class

and sold very well in North America. Because they were among the best-built cars of their time and held their resale value for decades, many examples are only now wearing out and

showing up

in the big self-service

junkyards I frequent

. Here’s a heartbreakingly unrusted ’71 hardtop coupe in a Northern California yard.

Junked 1971 Mercedes-Benz 250C

I’m not saying it was perfect when it took that final tow-truck ride, mind you— in addition to the battered interior, there’s a dead rat on the floor in front of the passenger seat. Fortunately for me, I photographed this car on a cool winter day.

Junked 1971 Mercedes-Benz 250C

The ’71 250C came with a 2,778cc straight-six SOHC engine rated at 157 horsepower, which was great power for that displacement in that era.

Junked 1971 Mercedes-Benz 250C

Like nearly all gasoline-engined W114s sold in the United States, this one has the four-speed automatic transmission. A four-speed manual was available, but I’ve only seen it in

diesel cars

.

Junked 1971 Mercedes-Benz 250C

The W114 wasn’t particularly large (curb weight on this car was a mere 2,993 pounds, about the same as that of the

2019 Honda Civic

) and the interior was fanatically well-made but not quite what Americans of 1971 considered

plush

. The price tag of $7,373 (about $46,500 in 2019 bucks) seemed like a lot of dollars for not much car, to those American car shoppers who wanted massive bulk and V8 torque for their money.

Junked 1971 Mercedes-Benz 250C

In fact, a

brand-new Cadillac Coupe DeVille

listed at $6,264 in 1971. That car weighed an oligarchical 4,685 pounds and boasted a 472-cubic-inch (7.7 liter) V8 grunting out 375 horsepower, not to mention a

mobster-grade interior

with room for four crooked attorneys plus a bent accountant or two.

Junked 1971 Mercedes-Benz 250C

Meanwhile,

the ’71 Lincoln Continental coupe

had an MSRP of $7,172 ($8,241 for the far sportier Mark III), weighed a battleship-grade 5,032 pounds, and got its power from a 365-horse V8 with 460 cubes of displacement.

Chrysler

offered a $6,044 Imperial coupe with 335 horses moving 4,705 pounds. Hell, even the cheapest possible

full-sized ’71 Chevy coupe

(the straight-six-powered ’71

Impala

hardtop, priced at $3,408) weighed 3,742 pounds and came close to the Benz’s power with its 145hp engine.

Junked 1971 Mercedes-Benz 250C

Of course, hindsight tells us that the W114s ended up holding together for a good 40 years longer than most of those Detroit luxury monsters. If you ever wanted one of these cars as a cool-looking daily driver, they’re out there and parts aren’t hard to find.

Here are some short home-market W114 promotional films for your enjoyment.

from Autoblog https://ift.tt/2BI8lSQ