danoid wrote:
Pre-TSB the gauge is still anything but linear. 160°-200° is about the midline for me. By 210° it's at 3/4, 220° 7/8. Around 237-240° you'll get a chime and power reduction. It's almost impossible to overheat the engine. If you keep pushing it, it will pull power (use less fuel) and create less heat until things cool off again.
I've hit the chime three times in 43k miles. Doing doughnuts, trailering in the mountains, and a slow speed switchback up a mountain that I was hurrying up. It's no big deal. Just let the engine idle to cool things off - do not shut it off right away. That cooks turbo bearings.
Post-TSB just keeps the gauge in the middle longer and probably pegs to the right over a smaller temperature range.
Agreed. One owner related to me privately that after having this TSB done, he watched coolant temp go from 180 to 210 and back down to 190 on his scan tool, and the needle on his coolant temp gauge never budged from dead center.
MB switched over to the same HOAT type antifreeze (Mopar 5/100, Motorcraft Premium Gold, Zerex G-05) back in the early 80's. It's what they spec on the '87 300D I have. Also, they still spec doing a cooling system flush and coolant changeout every two years, despite using HOAT coolant. And if I order a replacement surge tank for it, the new surge tank comes from the factory with an SCA additive pouch already in the tank.
If it's been a couple years or more, and the vehicle has seen some high heat situations, couldn't hurt anything to go ahead and do a cooling system flush and eliminate any potential problems.