2005 MERCEDES-BENZ CLK55 AMG C209

5.4L V8 Supercharged M113KRWDAUTOMATICgassupercharged
5-Year Cost of Ownership
$66,606 maintenance + known platform issues
~$13,321/yr · 1,110¢/mile equivalent · $55,587 maintenance + $8,419 expected platform issues
Common Problems & Known Issues

The 2005 CLK55 AMG houses the hand-built M113K supercharged V8—a phenomenal engine when healthy, but one that requires strict maintenance and can suffer catastrophic failure from a single design flaw: inadequate crankshaft bolt torque leading to harmonic balancer walk and eventual engine grenading.

Crankshaft Bolt Failure & Harmonic Balancer Walk

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 60,000-120,000 mi
Symptoms: Rattling or knocking from front of engine, especially at idle, Serpentine belt shredding repeatedly, Vibration through chassis at specific RPM ranges, Check engine light with crankshaft position sensor codes (P0335, P0336), Catastrophic failure: sudden loss of power, metal-on-metal grinding
Fix: The factory crank bolt stretches over time, allowing the harmonic balancer to walk forward and chew into the front cover, timing chain, and oil pump. Once symptoms appear, full front-end teardown is required: timing cover removal, inspect/replace crank bolt (upgraded aftermarket kit mandatory), new balancer, front main seal, timing components if damaged. If ignored, catastrophic internal failure destroys pistons, rods, and block requiring full rebuild or replacement. Preventive fix: 8-12 labor hours. Post-failure rebuild: 40-60 hours.
Estimated cost: $2,500-5,000 preventive / $15,000-25,000 post-catastrophic failure

Transmission Valve Body & Conductor Plate Failure (722.6 5-speed)

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 80,000-150,000 mi
Symptoms: Harsh or delayed shifts, especially 2-3 or 3-4, Limp mode activation (stuck in 2nd or 3rd gear), Flaring between shifts or slipping under load, Transmission fault codes (P0735, P0741, P0748), Erratic shift points or failure to downshift
Fix: The 722.6 transmission's valve body and 13-pin conductor plate develop worn solenoids, clogged passages, and cracked solder joints. Requires transmission pan drop, valve body removal, and replacement of valve body assembly and/or conductor plate. Also mandatory: new filter, pan gasket, and 9+ quarts of MB-spec ATF. Quality remanufactured valve body recommended over used. 6-10 labor hours depending on access and whether full recalibration is needed.
Estimated cost: $1,800-3,500

Supercharger Snout Bearing & Coupler Wear

Occasional · medium severity
Typical onset: 90,000-140,000 mi
Symptoms: Whining or grinding noise from supercharger that increases with RPM, Reduced boost pressure and sluggish acceleration, Metal shavings in supercharger oil during service, Visible play in supercharger pulley when wiggled by hand, Supercharger oil leaking from front seal
Fix: The Eaton M112 supercharger's front snout bearing wears from heat cycles and inadequate oiling intervals. Requires supercharger removal, disassembly, press-out old bearing, press-in new bearing, new front seal, coupler replacement, and fresh supercharger oil (not engine oil—specific MB synthetic). Also inspect for rotor scoring. Preventive supercharger oil changes every 30k mi dramatically extend bearing life. 8-12 labor hours for R&R and rebuild.
Estimated cost: $2,000-3,500

Airmatic Suspension Failure (if equipped)

Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 70,000-120,000 mi
Symptoms: Suspension warning light on dash, Vehicle sagging at one or more corners, especially after sitting overnight, Compressor runs constantly or cycles frequently, Harsh ride quality or bottoming out, Hissing sound from air struts
Fix: Air struts develop leaks in rubber bellows; compressor wears from overwork. Front struts fail more often than rear. Each strut: 2-3 hours labor. Compressor replacement: 3-4 hours. Relay valve and air lines also common culprits. Many owners convert to conventional coil springs (Arnott, ST, etc.) for $1,200-1,800 installed to avoid future air system headaches. OEM air strut replacement per corner runs higher.
Estimated cost: $1,200-2,000 per strut / $1,800-2,800 compressor / $1,500-2,200 coilover conversion

Engine & Transmission Mounts

Common · low severity
Typical onset: 60,000-100,000 mi
Symptoms: Clunking when shifting from Park to Drive or Reverse, Excessive vibration at idle, smooths out at higher RPM, Visible engine movement when revving in Park, Jerky acceleration from stop
Fix: The supercharged V8's torque destroys mounts faster than naturally aspirated models. Transmission mount (center) and front engine mounts most critical. Hydraulic mounts leak fluid, causing metal-to-metal contact. Replace all three (left, right, trans) as a set for best results. 4-6 hours labor total. OEM or Lemforder quality mandatory—cheap mounts fail within 20k mi.
Estimated cost: $800-1,400

SBC (Sensotronic Brake Control) Hydraulic Pump Failure

Occasional · high severity
Typical onset: null
Symptoms: Red brake warning light with message 'BRAKE VISIT WORKSHOP', Hard brake pedal with reduced braking power, Whining or buzzing from brake pump under hood, ABS/ESP lights illuminated, Pump runs continuously after ignition off
Fix: SBC system (brake-by-wire) uses high-pressure hydraulic pump that fails electronically or mechanically. When it fails, braking defaults to reduced manual mode—still functional but scary. Pump assembly replacement only; no rebuild option. Requires dealer-level diagnostics and coding. 3-5 hours labor. Mercedes extended warranty covered many, but 2005 units are now out of coverage. Consider this a when-not-if item on high-mileage examples.
Estimated cost: $2,500-4,000

Fuel Pump & Fuel Pressure Regulator Issues

Occasional · medium severity
Typical onset: 100,000+ mi
Symptoms: Extended cranking before start, especially when hot, Loss of power under hard acceleration or boost, Fuel smell in cabin or near fuel tank, Check engine light with fuel trim or fuel pressure codes, Engine stumbling or misfiring under load
Fix: In-tank fuel pump wears and pressure regulator diaphragms crack, causing fuel starvation under the supercharger's demand. Pump replacement requires tank drop. Also replace fuel filter (under car near tank) and check fuel lines for age-related cracking. 4-6 hours labor for pump; filter adds 1 hour. Use OEM or Bosch pump only—aftermarket pumps can't handle boost demand.
Estimated cost: $800-1,500
Owner tips
  • Change supercharger oil every 30,000 miles with MB-spec synthetic—this prevents $3k bearing replacements
  • Inspect harmonic balancer bolt at every major service; preventive replacement with upgraded ARP or OEM revised bolt at 60k-80k saves engines
  • Use only MB 229.5 spec engine oil (0W-40 or 5W-40); cheap oil accelerates sludge in M113K's tight tolerances
  • Transmission fluid should be changed every 40k miles despite 'lifetime fill' claim—722.6 longevity depends on it
  • Budget $2k/year for deferred maintenance if buying high-mileage (100k+); these cars punish neglect exponentially
Buy only with comprehensive service records showing supercharger oil changes, transmission services, and crank bolt inspection—otherwise budget $5k-8k immediately for catch-up maintenance; a well-maintained example is thrilling, but a neglected one will bankrupt you.
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.
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