The 2005 CLK320 with the M112 V6 is generally a solid platform, but it suffers from two catastrophic weak points: balance shaft gear failure that can grenade the entire engine, and transmission oil cooler leaks that destroy the 722.6 transmission. These aren't 'if' problems—they're 'when' problems that require aggressive preventive maintenance.
Balance Shaft Gear Failure (M112 V6 Catastrophic Failure)
Common · high severityTypical onset: 80,000-150,000 mi
Symptoms: Sudden catastrophic engine noise—metal-on-metal grinding from timing cover area, Immediate loss of oil pressure and engine seizure, Often zero warning—engine runs fine then grenades within seconds, Metal shavings throughout oil system after failure
Fix: The plastic balance shaft gear strips its teeth, jamming the balance shaft and destroying the engine from the inside. Requires complete engine rebuild or replacement. 25-35 labor hours for engine R&R plus rebuild/replacement. The ONLY preventive fix is proactive balance shaft gear replacement around 75,000-100,000 mi (8-12 labor hours, requires timing cover removal). This is non-negotiable on these engines.
Estimated cost: $6,500-12,000
Transmission Oil Cooler Internal Leak (Radiator End Tank)
Common · high severityTypical onset: 60,000-120,000 mi
Symptoms: Transmission fluid turns pink or milky (coolant contamination), Harsh shifting, slipping, or delayed engagement after cooler failure, Coolant level drops, transmission fluid level rises, Transmission failure follows within days to weeks if not caught immediately
Fix: The radiator's integral transmission cooler develops internal leaks, mixing coolant and ATF—this destroys clutch packs and valve body almost instantly. Requires radiator replacement (with external cooler retrofit strongly recommended), complete transmission fluid flush, often transmission rebuild. 3-4 hours for radiator, 15-25 hours if transmission needs rebuild. Preventive external cooler install at 60k miles is cheap insurance.
Estimated cost: $800-1,200 (preventive) / $4,500-7,000 (after contamination damage)
Transmission Mount Failure (Engine/Trans Package Shifting)
Common · medium severityTypical onset: 70,000-120,000 mi
Symptoms: Clunk when shifting from Park to Drive or Reverse, Excessive vibration at idle in gear, Visible sagging of transmission tail—check from underneath, Increased cabin noise and harshness over bumps
Fix: The hydraulic transmission mount collapses, allowing excessive powertrain movement. Not dangerous but accelerates wear on driveshaft flex discs and exhaust hangers. Replace transmission mount and inspect engine mounts simultaneously. 2-3 labor hours, requires trans support during replacement.
Estimated cost: $450-750
Crankshaft Position Sensor Failure (No-Start Condition)
Occasional · high severityTypical onset: 90,000-140,000 mi
Symptoms: Intermittent no-start—engine cranks but won't fire, Stalling while driving, usually restarts after cooling, Check engine light with P0335 or P0336 codes, Often heat-related—fails when engine fully warmed up
Fix: Sensor fails internally, usually heat-related. Located on bell housing, accessible from underneath. Diagnosis can be tricky because failures are intermittent. 1.5-2 labor hours for replacement. Always replace with OEM—aftermarket sensors fail frequently on this platform.
Estimated cost: $350-550
Window Regulator Failure (Front and Rear)
Common · low severityTypical onset: 60,000-100,000 mi
Symptoms: Window drops into door, won't raise, Grinding or clicking noise from door when operating window, Window operates slowly or binds partway up/down, Coupe doors make this particularly annoying—must open door to exit if window stuck down
Fix: Plastic rollers and clips in regulator mechanism fail. Common Mercedes issue across this era. Front regulators: 2-3 hours each. Rear regulators: 3-4 hours each due to door trim complexity. Use updated metal-roller designs when available—OE replacement lasts longer than original.
Estimated cost: $450-700 per window
SBC Brake System (Sensotronic Brake Control) Pump Failure
Occasional · high severityTypical onset: Not mileage-dependent—typically 8-12 years age-related
Symptoms: Red 'BRAKE VISIT WORKSHOP' warning on dash, Increased brake pedal effort—feels like manual brakes, Grinding or whining noise from SBC pump (right front inner fender), ABS/ESP lights illuminated—system defaults to basic hydraulic braking
Fix: The SBC hydraulic brake-by-wire system was used 2003-2009 and is notoriously failure-prone. Pump motor or accumulator fails. Mercedes extended warranty to 15 years/200k miles (expired on 2005s), so now owner responsibility. Requires specialized SBC tool for proper replacement and bleeding. 4-6 labor hours. Many techs retrofit conventional brake booster system instead (requires Master Cylinder, booster, ABS pump, lines—major job).
Estimated cost: $2,800-4,500 (SBC replacement) / $4,000-6,500 (conventional conversion)
Buy only if balance shaft gear and transmission cooler have been addressed with documentation—otherwise you're one highway drive away from a $10k engine/trans replacement on a $6k car.
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.