Used Car of the Day: 1994 Mercedes-Benz E320 Cabriolet

Tim Healey
by Tim Healey

Today we bring you a 1994 Mercedes-Benz E320 Cabriolet that can either be a parts car or a project car.


The seller is getting rid of the car after 13 years because the reverse gear has given up the ghost. The car can still drive forward, however.

In addition to repairing or replacing the transmission, there is other work the car needs. This includes a window regulator for the driver's door and hydraulics for the top.

If you're interested in a cheap convertible, the ask for this North Carolina-based car is $2,500. Click here to check it out.

[Images: Seller]

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Tim Healey
Tim Healey

Tim Healey grew up around the auto-parts business and has always had a love for cars — his parents joke his first word was “‘Vette”. Despite this, he wanted to pursue a career in sports writing but he ended up falling semi-accidentally into the automotive-journalism industry, first at Consumer Guide Automotive and later at Web2Carz.com. He also worked as an industry analyst at Mintel Group and freelanced for About.com, CarFax, Vehix.com, High Gear Media, Torque News, FutureCar.com, Cars.com, among others, and of course Vertical Scope sites such as AutoGuide.com, Off-Road.com, and HybridCars.com. He’s an urbanite and as such, doesn’t need a daily driver, but if he had one, it would be compact, sporty, and have a manual transmission.

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  • RHD RHD on Dec 12, 2023

    One of the red flags here is the brake dust on the front wheels. The owner doesn't bother to wash the car... or do preventive maintenance, such as rotating the tires.

    You can count on having to do a very deep detail and complete tuneup, fluids changes, brake pads and the last 50,000 miles' worth of preventive maintenance, on top of fixing the top, the nicks and dents on the body and the other obvious mechanical issues. If you're a fan of MBs of this generation, and you love a project, then offer him $1,500 and maybe get talked up to $1,700. Then put aside double that for the stuff that needs fixing - as long as you do the work yourself.

  • 28-Cars-Later 28-Cars-Later on Dec 13, 2023

    1. Rear bumper is jacked up.
    2. Scratch on rear unibody.
    3. Roof aftermarket or still factory?
    4. Do the roof motors and folding mechanism parts still exist?
    5. Do techs still exist to repair the roof (or is this still a period of very simple roofs with no sensors?)
    6. Transmission needs rebuilt or replaced.
    7. Motor needs, a lot most likely.
    8. Muffler rusty which means the exhaust is as well, and probably rotted underneath (need check wheel wells).
    9. Listed miles are conspicuously absent, so assume 200,000.


    $500 as it sits, assuming its not completely rotted underneath probably worth messing with to the person who could just leave the roof down permanently and only drive on sunny days. Putting this back together properly may not be possible at this point (i.e. roof related unobtanium).

    • See 1 previous
    • 28-Cars-Later 28-Cars-Later on Dec 14, 2023

      I didn't know that, good to know. I have barely seen these in my entire life so they may be very valuable when in clean condition, but knowing what I know from the Volvos sorting this would be a labor of love and even when complete financially I'm not sure it would be worth it.

      I see four of these on Autotrader:


      1. '94, 65K, $17,9
      2. '95, 90K, $20,0
      3. '95, 42K, $22,4
      4. '95, 34K, $26,8

      Even in the hands of a Mercedes tech -and assuming no OBDI codes- I imagine the non roof or body related work is several grand. Then of course the roof is a big variable, I see rust on the rear wheel well similar to my Volvo so that needs repaired but suggests more rot underneath. Then the example has to be north of 100K otc, and is probably between 100 and 200K. So you sink at minimum $5K into it, pay $2K for it, and are sitting $7K with your own labor and what's it worth? $10? Most collectors are going to buy the examples on Autotrader with much fewer miles and use (that '94 is probably the best value buy with the 42K '95 being the best overall buy IMO). Unless you are a Mercedes master tech (or expert otherwise) from this period and know exactly what's wrong to price accordingly, this is a black hole of money and time which I doubt will be recouped later on resale - unless resale is 20+ years from now.

















































  • Burnbomber GM front driver A-bodies. They are the Chevy Celebrity, Pontiac 6000, Oldsmobile Ciera, and Buick Century (5th Generation). These are a derivative from the much maligned Chevrolet Citation, but they got this generation good. My 1st connection was in a daily 80 mile car pool,always riding in the back seat, in a stripper Pontiac 6000. It was a nice ride, quiet and roomy. Then I changed jobs and had a Chevy Celebrity as a company car. They were heavy duty strippers with a better than average GM feel (from F40 heavy-duty suspension option). I bought 2 ex-company cars at auction--one for my family and one for mother-in-law. They were extremely reliable, parts dirt cheap (especially in u-pulls), and simple to work on. It was the most reliable GM I've ever owned; better than my current Chevy Equinox, which will take a miracle to last as long as they did.
  • Slavuta Drivers in Bharat are better. Considering that rules are accepted as mere suggestions and a mix of car, bicycle, motorbike, pedestrian at the same place and time, these guys are virtuosos.
  • Grandmaster T Tesla Cybertruck?
  • Ava169189168 NO driver, at any age, should get a license without completing a Driver's Ed course.
  • Golden2husky My HS friend's family had a Wagoneer. These SUVs, plus the next gen that replaced it, were very much front and center in affluent neighborhoods. They were a tough as an anvil, and about as sophisticated. What this poor truck was put through was a testament to how rugged it was. We needed the "emergency" switch in the glove box on more than one occasion to get moving. Sadly, he flipped it in a parking lot - going fast in reverse and cutting the wheel hard. Tons of tire squealing, then silence. It's over so I thought until we landed on the roof and front of hood. I watched the windshield shatter and we ended up on our side. Stupid things kids will do. The Wagoneer took on a decidedly TR-7 look after the rollover.
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