clemenshess97
Member
My other car is a 2004 Mercedes C-Class and it is a pain in the a**. You can do most of the rapairs yourself, but you always have to remove a thousand other compoments before you get to the component you're trying to repair, and it's always tight, not much place for tools.
I put some grease on the intermediate steering shaft on my Tahoe the other day, did that in maybe 5 minutes...then I looked at my Mercedes and couldn't even find the intermediate shaft, because it was buried under tons of tech.
I agree that they are not ideal in our city centers but as you said, most people move out of your way when they see you coming. Parking is ok where I live, but I would run into problems if it was a Suburban.
My girlfriend and I fell in love with US trucks when we travelled to the US the first time in 2018, then again in 2019. We had a rental Suburban from Hertz and travelled thousands and thousands of miles across the states (On our roadtrips we travelled through 27 states I think) and never regret to have choosen the Suburban over a mid size SUV, it was the perfect roadtrip car with all the space and comfort.
I put some grease on the intermediate steering shaft on my Tahoe the other day, did that in maybe 5 minutes...then I looked at my Mercedes and couldn't even find the intermediate shaft, because it was buried under tons of tech.
I agree that they are not ideal in our city centers but as you said, most people move out of your way when they see you coming. Parking is ok where I live, but I would run into problems if it was a Suburban.
My girlfriend and I fell in love with US trucks when we travelled to the US the first time in 2018, then again in 2019. We had a rental Suburban from Hertz and travelled thousands and thousands of miles across the states (On our roadtrips we travelled through 27 states I think) and never regret to have choosen the Suburban over a mid size SUV, it was the perfect roadtrip car with all the space and comfort.