The most legendary of all the Mercedes-Benz E-Class ancestors—and perhaps of all Mercedes-Benzes, period—is the W123, which was sold in the United States from the 1977 through 1985 model years. The W123 was rugged yet comfortable, and the majority sold here had diesel power. Today’s Junkyard Gem
is a harder-to-find gasoline-burner, found in a Colorado car graveyard a couple of years back.
The buyer of this car took the latter choice, which probably seemed wise when gasoline prices crashed in the middle 1980s. This is a 2.8-liter (actually 2.746-liter, but we’ll give it credit for an extra five cubic centimeters and round up) straight-six, rated at 142 horsepower and 149 pound-feet. The 240D
Starting in the 1981 model year, all new US-market W123s were diesel-only.
If you wanted an automatic in your US-market 280E in 1979, too bad! The only transmission available was a four-speed automatic. In fact, the only new Mercedes-Benz with three pedals available at American dealerships in 1979 was the 240D with a four-on-the-floor.
The interior in this car is very nice for a 42-year-old car in Colorado’s harsh climate.
Part of that is the indestructible MB-Tex fake leather on the seats. If there’s any fabric used in motor vehicles that can outlast this stuff, I haven’t heard of it.
Just over 115,000 miles on the odometer, which is laughably low by W123 standards
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