Eight years ago, I was introduced to a man who would ultimately become an incredible friend after realizing we shared a common love for cars and having graduated from the same DoDDS high school in Germany, albeit 50 years apart.
Behind his shop sat a 1951 170S, sans motor and transmission, but otherwise in good shape save for a small section of the trunk floor which will still need to be addressed. Being German myself, born and raised, and growing up around MBs (my uncle is a master mechanic, and taught me as I grew up), I had to have it.
All this time later, not too much has happened and it's now time to really get back into this project. I've begun the 6V to 12V conversion, and seeing as how there aren't too many independent circuits, the process has been easy. I just need to acquire 12V replacement bulbs for all around.
The main stumbling block that has dragged this project out for so long has been my inability to decide on a motor. The original motor and transmission combination would not be safe for road use here in Texas where everyone is flying, and I'd like to have this car as an occasional daily driver here and there. Resale value is moot to me as I don't believe I'll ever part with it in my lifetime, it's a handsome vehicle that just needs to be brought back and livened up a little bit.
Seeing as Corky (my aforementioned friend) has been working with Miatas since they first came out, his suggestion was using a 1.6 from an NA. I was on board with this until I fit one in and discovered an issue that would involve modifying the steering column as the exhaust is on the driver's side of the motor. Even a custom exhaust header wouldn't have enough space to avoid having to modify the steering column. I also received a lot of flak from purists about using a Mazda motor in a Mercedes (not that I really cared, it's ultimately my vehicle).
I looked for ways to keep it in the MB family, and while the M102 (4cyl) from a 190E sports passenger side exhaust ports, remedying the need for touching the steering column, those 4 cylinders are large for what they are, and finding one with a manual transmission is even more difficult. Part of me toyed with taking the DOHC M102.983 out of my '85 190E 2.3-16 for the 170S and tossing an M104 in 190E, but that motor is already perfect for that car; it just needs EFI and some quality forced induction (a project for a later date).
Then I remembered I have a spare 5.0L M117 motor that needs a rebuild, so I attempted to fit that in the engine bay only to discover it's long and wide, meaning the firewall would need to be cut into (something I'd actually like to avoid), so that put an MB V8 out of the question. I was all for adapting a manual to that motor, too.
I have a 13B rotary with transmission in my possession, and while that would fit easy and is simple enough to get running, I don't know if I would want to live with a rotary for something I could be dailying. Maintenance doesn't scare me, I'd just rather not have to engineer in potential problems (not knocking the 13B, they sound great and are a riot to drive in an RX).
So that leaves me where I am now; looking for a 4 cylinder motor that's compact, easy to get running, passenger side exhaust ports, and provides more than the factory 52HP!
The 3-cyl 1.0 EcoBoost was tempting, and there are plenty around for cheap, but without knowing how easy they'd be to adapt to a RWD platform (besides just sitting it in the trunk) and standalone management for the DI system, it seems it would be a daunting task to complete.
Now for some photos! They're a little older, but depict the car how it currently is:
When the 1.6 was test-fit, not quite centered either, you can see how the intake manifold is close to the fender and that's without the throttle body and any intake tubing:
Thanks for reading!