I did this the other day, thought I'd post on it:
The heater valve lives under the approx. 3 inch black rubber plug on the bulkhead.
Parts needed: heater valve o-ring (more on that later).
Tools needed: flat screw driver; long needle-nose pliers; magnet can be very handy; pliers; small flat screwdriver; paper and marking pen. Sketching and marking are important.
This is a quick, easy job if things aren't stuck, but be patient and DON'T DROP ANYTHING.
There is no need to drain any coolant.
Remove rubber plug.
Remove small screw and washer (magnet is useful); don't drop!
Note orientation of control lever on your sketch.
Pull off control lever and move aside.
Sketch the position of the little metal piece below the control arm (I call this the "travel limiter").
Put a mark on the travel limiter to show which way is up.
Pry or use long needle nose pliers to pull travel limiter upward and off the square section, then slide it out of the slot. DON'T DROP IT.
Mark the top of the valve and show the orientation of the mark on your sketch. This is to help get the valve back in the right way around.
The attached photo shows the heater valve with the control arm off. If you look carefully, the travel limiter is visible, pointing to about 4 o'clock.
Grip the square section with pliers, not too tight, and see if the valve turns easily. If it does, you can probably pull it straight out easily. If it won't move or pull out easily, there are other methods that others have come up with, such as running in a screw and pulling or prying up on the screw. Go easy with the pliers, it may be possible to damage or distort the square section. Screw threads are 4 x 0.7 mm.
Remove old o-ring, clean valve body (but don't wipe off your marks!), install new o-ring and reinstall valve. Installation is reverse of removal. You might want to use some kind of grease on the o-ring, up to you (I didn't).
The o-ring: I have ordered o-rings twice from one supplier, and gotten two different sizes. Both sealed well, but the first was thinner than the second, and allowed easy movement of the heater control. The second was thicker, harder to reinstall the valve, and it was very hard to move the heater control even with some grease on it. I assume this hard movement would eventually cause the control to break, so I was not happy with it. As far as I can tell, the second very tight o-ring was a US size, 1/2 inch ID, 1/8 inch thick, and 3/4 inch OD. I believe the first o-ring was 1/2 inch ID, 3/32 inch thick, and 11/16 OD.
This time I used a 1/2 inch ID, 3/32 inch thick, 11/16 OD size, which I got at a hardware store. When installed on the valve, this size 0-ring is only about 0.010 inch larger than the inside diameter of the valve, but it seems to be enough. After installation I ran the engine up to temp and there was no leakage. Note that this is not a recommendation to use the same size, your results may vary, etc. etc., it's just what I used. If anyone gets an o-ring from an MB dealer, please post the dimensions (assuming it's metric).
Hope this is somewhat useful.
Download Attachment: heater_valve3.JPG69.41 KB
George Davis
'69 280 SL Euro manual