GRR

Dan Trent: 500E – Merc's original 'Bahn-stormer

07th March 2017
dan_trent_headshot.jpg Dan Trent

Such are the meanderings of a classifieds addict that this week's column was originally going to be about the VW Corrado VR6 in its 25th anniversary year. I started browsing a few, muttered some choice words when I saw the speculative prices being asked for a couple of 'concours winning' examples and then got distracted by a Mercedes SL60 AMG at the same dealer.

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Quite a car – I drove one a little while ago and its mighty AMG engine is enough to blow the grey slip-ons off the R129 SL's old man image. But I can't quite summon the passion. 

This led to pondering the engine that makes the SL60 such a machine – the four-valve M119 V8 Mercedes used across a number of flagship cars in the early 90s. AMG bored it out to a 6.0 for its cars but even in stock 5.0-litre form it was a hell of an engine, no more so than when it was inserted into the W124-era E-Class.

Perhaps the most Mercedes of Mercedes saloons ever made, the W124 is to me the perfect intersection of the brand's traditions, rooted in Swabian sobriety and understatement but also – quietly – forward thinking and technologically advanced for its day. I'd happily run a wheezy four-cylinder example if one came my way. I'd be even happier with a V8 one, built with Porsche.

Urban myth has it this came about as a neighbourly favour for Porsche as it was going through a bit of a rough patch. Certainly the stories of part-assembled 500E's going to and fro across Stuttgart between the two factories adds to the mystique, likewise the handbuilt nature of the cars. Over 10,000 were built so, if true, it certainly kept otherwise idle hands in Zuffenhausen very busy for a period.

Commonly framed as the Mercedes response to the BMW M5, the 500E was a very different beast to the racy 5 Series. Subtle to the point of anonymity, the early 500Es with their 16-inch wheels are almost impossible to tell apart from a regular E-Class. Just a slightly lower stance and those wider front arches give the game away. I love that. 

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320bhp isn't much by modern standards and the solidity of the W124 and the sluggish four-speed automatic rather blunt the initial impact. Drive one and you might well feel underwhelmed. Indeed, drive one in the UK and you might never really appreciate what makes it special. Because if ever there was a car built for the Autobahn, this is it. And once you wind the 500E up its true character finally comes through. This is a proper brute of a car. A refined and beautifully built one. But still a brute.

The later E500s that account for about a quarter of the production run are more popular, especially the run-out Limited model with its 190 EvoII wheels and fancier interior. The rare 6.0-litre E60 AMG ones even more so, to the point they're now commanding serious money.

For maximum stealth value I'd like an orange indicator 500E with the stock wheels. Not so long ago you could get one for half the £25,000 of my chosen car. But as supplies dwindle, prices are on the up and, given the potential for big bills, it would make sense to buy one that's been properly sorted. Most have hefty six-figure mileages but with the right care, there's no reason to fear that. It is, after all, what it was built for. That and bulldozing BMWs off the Autobahn.  

  • Mercedes-Benz

  • AMG

  • E500

  • Dan Trent

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