Here's an update on this situation. We drove the 280SL to Aspen on Saturday, and returned last night. The entire trip was about 460 miles, including tooling around (20 MPG!). Prior to leaving, I put a can of BG44K in the gas, and after a quarter tank of gas was used, the idle was up to about 1600 from 1100, and the car idled in gear about 600 RPM. I guess the injectors were dirty or something else in the fuel system needed cleaning. Now that I'm home, I'll readjust the idle settings.
As for getting the car worked on in Colorado Springs, there are two independent shops frequented by MB owners. Once I bought a 300D Turbo, and the turbo didn't work. I took it to both these shops, and they both said the turbo needed replacing. This was on the order of $1600 plus labor, and being cheap, I looked further. A man who called himself "Diesel Dan" on the internet helped me discover an overboost shutoff valve, or something like that, was bad. I replaced it for about 25 bucks. The turbo then worked fine.
One of these shops has been "the place" to take your car, and is especially popular with real estate agents and wives of physicians. They always send out birthday cards and reminders of service required as part of their fawning and obsequious facade. In December last year, the state raided the place and found over 100 stolen MBs there. They were shut down, but are now reopened. I don't know any details, but do suspect their moral lapses are not just recent.
The other shop is a one-man operation, and this guy, a purported ex-German, exhibits the requisite crustiness to be a 113 expert. However, I think he was the person who set the timing on my car 20 degrees off, because the person who sold me the car had this guy do the emissions for it. The fact that the CO was over 10% only 300 miles after the car passed his emissions test indicates possible moral lapses on his part, too. Don't get me wrong. These sorts can be very useful when faced with onerous state laws.
Anyway, like so many fellow list members, I've discovered if I want the car worked on right, I'll have to learn to do it myself.
The car looked wonderful in Aspen, town of designer water, food, women, cars, tans and dogs. The designer car of the moment is the Hummer, though, indicating the owner is serious about chic off-the-road activities. Special cachet is achieved via the proper exhibition of mud on the vehicle.
Returning, we were on an 8-mile downward slope in the Rockies, and I put the car into neutral to save gas. I noticed the RPMs stayed about 2100 while coasting. Does this indicate something in the automatic transmission needs adjusting? Also, is coasting potentially damaging to the transmission, like towing the car with the driveline intact?
Joe2