Mercedes-Benz CL 500
Large-displacement naturally aspirated V8, second generation with variable valve timing on all four camshafts. Technically related to the M272 V6 — shares its known balance shaft sprocket problem on build years before 2007 (engine number below 088611). From that number the sprocket was made of hardened steel. Check early engines for fault codes P0016/P0017 and cold-start chain noise. The 5.5-litre with 285 kW is the typical variant; the 5.0-litre with 225–250 kW is somewhat more forgiving in heavier vehicles. The M278 BiTurbo successor is more efficient and more powerful, but sounds considerably less characterful — the M273 is the last true naturally aspirated V8 from Stuttgart. Pre-purchase: always check for camshaft adjuster leaks (oil in wiring harness) and thermostat fault P0128. Oil changes every 10,000 km with MB 229.5.
CL 500 C216 — The Quietest Grand-Touring Coupé with V8
The CL 500 is the most refined interpretation of the M273: perfect insulation, AIRMATIC, 285 kW from 5.5 litres — and barely any engine note inside. That's not a deficit, that's the concept. Anyone who covers 250 km/h on the motorway in relaxed fashion will find the ideal tool here. Note the balance shaft issue — many CL500s still have the 3,000-euro repair ahead of them.
Engine Weaknesses 9
The M273 V8 shares the balance shaft sprocket issue with the M272 V6. The soft composite material of the sprocket wears down, causing timing chain rattle.
Symptoms: Fault codes P0016/P0017, chain rattling, rough idle, power loss
As with the similarly-designed M272, the solenoid valves leak. The V8 has 4 per bank — consequential costs are particularly high due to more solenoids. Oil migrates by capillary action all the way to the ECU.
Symptoms: Check engine light with camshaft fault codes P0014/P0015/P0021/P0025, lambda sensor failures, in extreme cases ECU failure
Like the M113, the valve cover gaskets on the M273 V8 become porous over time. With a V8 having two cylinder heads, the workload doubles.
Symptoms: Oil spots under the vehicle, oil smell after hard driving, oily engine bay
Identical to the M272: plastic linkages on the variable intake flaps become brittle and break. Fault code P2006 is typical.
Symptoms: Check engine light with P2004–P2006, minimal power loss at certain rpm
The 3-disc thermostat on the M273 V8 fails prematurely in the open position. On motorway driving coolant temperature drops to 75–86°C. Difficult to access in the V8 engine bay.
Symptoms: Coolant temperature fluctuates between 75–102°C depending on load, engine does not reach operating temperature in cold conditions, fault code P0128
The M273 V8 frequently shows sporadic misfires from aged ignition coils. Water in the plug well through porous seals accelerates failure.
Symptoms: Hesitation on acceleration, rough engine running, fault codes P0301–P0308, check engine light flashes with heavy misfires
As mileage increases the M273 V8 shows noticeable oil consumption. 32 valve stem seals wear simultaneously. Above approx. 0.5 L/1,000 km intervention is needed. When doing the balance shaft repair, renew seals and rings at the same time.
Symptoms: Blue smoke on cold start or after long overrun phases, dropping oil level between service intervals, oil consumption above 0.5 L/1,000 km
The throttle body is prone to heavy carbon buildup from approx. 120,000 km. Idle hesitates and vibrates, throttle response lags on load changes. Cleaning is possible but requires a basic adaptation with a diagnostic tool.
Symptoms: Rough idle at operating temperature, slight hesitation on pull-away, engine revs unevenly after cold start, occasional stalling
Engine mounts fatigue and no longer adequately dampen V8 vibrations. Noticeable vibrations in the interior and at the steering wheel around 1,800 and 2,400 rpm. Test: blip the throttle at idle — more than 4 cm of engine movement indicates mounts are due.
Symptoms: Noticeable vibrations at 1,800 and 2,400 rpm, dull droning in the passenger compartment, visible engine rocking when blipping the throttle at idle
Vehicle Weaknesses 6
On the C216 with ABC suspension, replacing all dampers and valve blocks costs €8,000–10,000. Airmatic is also expensive: two air bags cost around €2,500, the compressor another €600.
Blocked drainage channels allow water in under the glove box, damaging the control units housed there. Diagnosis is difficult as faults often appear only intermittently.
The Active Body Control suspension is very maintenance-intensive. Hydraulic lines become porous and contaminate the system. Valve block and hydraulic pump fail regularly.
Control units located under the glovebox can suffer total failure from water ingress. Gearbox loses communication with ABS.
The instrument cluster suffers pixel failures, display drop-outs and incorrect gauge positions. In the worst case the immobiliser activates.
On the C216, a weak or defective auxiliary battery triggers a cascade of electrical faults: speedo flickers, gearbox and ABS lose communication, radio fails, central locking fails.