The 2007 S350 W221 with the M272 V6 is a complex luxury sedan plagued by catastrophic engine failure from balance shaft issues and transmission cooling problems that can total the car if ignored. Beautiful when running, but these aren't maintenance items—they're ticking time bombs that require engine-out work.
Symptoms: Rattling noise from engine at startup that disappears when warm, Check engine light with timing correlation codes (P0016, P0017), Metal shavings in oil, sudden loss of power, Complete engine seizure if gear teeth strip and jam timing
Fix: The plastic balance shaft gears disintegrate and destroy the engine from the inside. Requires complete engine removal, teardown, and replacement of balance shaft assembly, often pistons, bearings, and machining due to debris damage. 25-35 labor hours for full rebuild. Many shops recommend installing updated metal gears during repair. If caught early (just noise), you might get away with balance shaft replacement only (16-20 hours), but most discover it too late.
Estimated cost: $8,000-15,000
Transmission Oil Cooler Line Failure
Common · high severity
Typical onset: 80,000-150,000 mi
Symptoms: Transmission slipping or delayed engagement, Pink or milky transmission fluid (coolant contamination), Red fluid leaking from front of engine area, Transmission overheating warnings on dash
Fix: The plastic cooler lines crack where they connect to the radiator, leaking ATF or allowing coolant to mix with transmission fluid. Contaminated fluid destroys the 722.9 7-speed transmission within days. Requires immediate replacement of cooler lines and complete transmission fluid flush—if caught early. If contamination occurred, add transmission rebuild or replacement (18-24 hours). The lines themselves are 3-4 hours to replace properly.
Symptoms: Rough idle, especially when warm, P0016/P0017 timing correlation codes, Hesitation on acceleration, No-start condition (crank sensor failure)
Fix: The M272 runs variable valve timing and the camshaft adjusters wear internally, causing rattling and timing issues. Crank position sensor fails frequently. Sensor replacement is 1.5-2 hours. Cam adjusters require valve cover removal on each bank, 6-8 hours total. Often done together with balance shaft inspection if you're smart. Use only OE sensors—aftermarket fail within months.
Estimated cost: $400-800 (sensors), $1,800-2,800 (adjusters both banks)
Airmatic Suspension Failure
Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 60,000-100,000 mi
Symptoms: Vehicle sagging on one or more corners overnight, Airmatic warning on dash with car in 'limp mode' height, Compressor running constantly, Clunking from suspension over bumps
Fix: Air struts develop leaks at the rubber bellows. Compressor wears out from overwork. Each strut is 2-3 hours to replace. Compressor is 3-4 hours plus relay module often needed. Front struts fail first, then rears. Don't replace just one—do the axle pair or you'll be back in three months. Valve block can also fail (5-6 hours, $1,200-1,800 part). Many owners convert to coil springs ($2,000-3,000 kit with labor) to escape the cycle.
Estimated cost: $1,200-1,800 per strut, $1,800-2,500 (compressor), $2,500-4,000 (coil conversion)
Fuel Pump and Fuel System Issues
Occasional · medium severity
Typical onset: 90,000-140,000 mi
Symptoms: Long crank time before starting, Loss of power under acceleration, Engine stumbling or cutting out at highway speed, Fuel smell near rear of vehicle
Fix: The in-tank fuel pump assembly fails, and the fuel filter (integrated into the pump module) clogs with debris. Mercedes considers the filter 'lifetime' but it isn't. Pump replacement requires dropping the fuel tank (4-5 hours) due to no access panel. Filter cannot be serviced separately—requires full pump assembly. High-pressure pump on engine can also fail (2-3 hours), causing similar symptoms.
Symptoms: Hydraulic fluid puddles under car (green fluid), ABC warning light with 'Stop vehicle' message, Car leaning to one side, Rough ride quality
Fix: If equipped with ABC instead of Airmatic, hydraulic lines and pulsation dampers leak. The system operates at 3,000+ PSI. Hoses crack with age, dampers corrode and weep. Each damper is 2-4 hours depending on location. Lines vary widely. ABC pump failure is catastrophic: 8-10 hours, $3,500-5,000 in parts alone. This system is why many techs recommend avoiding ABC-equipped W221s entirely.
Symptoms: Clunk when shifting from Park to Drive/Reverse, Vibration at idle in Drive, Excessive engine movement visible when revving
Fix: Hydraulic engine and transmission mounts fail, causing driveline shunt. Transmission mount is most common (2-3 hours). Engine mounts are 3-4 hours each. Not dangerous but annoying and accelerates wear on other components. Replace in pairs (left/right engine mounts together).
Change engine oil every 5,000 miles maximum with Euro-spec 0W-40—extended intervals kill M272 engines faster
Inspect balance shaft gear condition before buying any used M272; ask for valve cover removal and borescope inspection
Replace transmission cooler lines preventively at 80k miles—$800 now vs $6,000 later when trans is contaminated
Budget $2,000-3,000/year for repairs after 100k miles; this is not a Toyota maintenance schedule
Avoid ABC suspension cars unless you have deep pockets; Airmatic is bad enough, ABC is financial suicide
Use Mercedes-Benz genuine parts for sensors and electronics—aftermarket causes phantom electrical issues on this chassis
Buy only if you can afford a $10k engine rebuild and accept $3k/year maintenance; otherwise this W221 will financially destroy you when the balance shaft grenades—which it will.
AI-assisted summary drawn from NHTSA recall data, our labor-times database, and platform knowledge. Not a substitute for a pre-purchase inspection on a specific vehicle.
Fitment notes: AGM battery required; located in trunk right side; higher capacity recommended for vehicle electronics
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Every control module on the 2007-2009 Mercedes-Benz S350 W221 — where it lives, replacement time, and what it takes to program a replacement. Modules marked dealer / factory tool won't work after a part swap alone — budget for programming.
Active Body Control (ABC)2.5 hr R&Rdealer / factory tool +1.0 hr▸ programming details
📍 Front passenger footwell, behind the carpet/kick panel
🔧 Star Diagnosis DAS/Xentry
⚠️ Optional on S350; standard on higher trims. Hydraulic system bleeding required. SCN coding and ride height calibration mandatory. · Location verified on same-chassis S65 (W221) by owner 2026-07-19 and propagated; engine-bay components are the ABC hydraulics, not the control unit.
📍 Passenger seat, under seat cushion, front rail area
🔧 Star Diagnosis or Autel MaxiSys
⚠️ Memory seat calibration required if equipped.
Bi-Xenon Control Unit (XCU)0.5 hr R&Rrelearn only +0.2 hr▸ programming details
📍 Each headlight assembly, integrated into headlight housing (two units total)
🔧 Star Diagnosis or scan tool
⚠️ Auto-leveling calibration required. Simple relearn procedure, no VIN coding.
Aftermarket tool coverage varies by software version and vehicle build — treat "aftermarket tool" rows as "usually possible" and verify against your tool maker's coverage list before promising a customer. Spot a wrong location or hour? Tell us — corrections ship fast here.
Size-standard part numbers — verify your connector type before buying. Rear blades are model-specific; check the package's vehicle list.
Fuel economy figures are EPA data via fueleconomy.gov (median across matching trims). Performance figures are compiled estimates for the 2007 Mercedes-Benz S350 W221 3.5L V6 M272 and can vary by trim.
🔧 Database maintained under the daily editorial review of Chris Hackleman · Master Technician · 20+ years and Jeff Moore · Master Lexus & Toyota Mechanic · 20+ years.