Background
If the W124 saloons and estates were the last Mercedes-Benz cars built up to a quality rather than down a price, the W123 cars were the last to have been over-engineered to what is now an obviously ridiculous degree. Offered with both petrol and diesel engines, as well as saloon, coupe and estate versions, the W123 was the first estate you could buy direct from the factory; previous versions having all been bespoke conversions carried out by third-party coachbuilders.
The W123 was innovative, too. Anti-lock braking was offered as an option from as early as August 1980 and risk-adverse drivers could order their new Merc with an airbag from 1982. The cars also featured a retractable steering column and servo-assisted disc brakes; the W123 might have been handsome rather than pretty, but it was exactly the sort of faithful, safe and reliable vehicle that well-heeled drivers were confident to put their families in.
Which makes a good one a very shrewd buy now if you’re in the market for a classic daily driver that’ll swallow a handful of kids plus their detritus for decade after decade, with only the whiff of an oily rag.







