1992 Mercedes-Benz S-Class 600SEL
Check out the car listing on our site here: https://skywayclassics.com/vehicles/s... 1992 Mercedes-Benz 600SEL — V12 Flagship with Borla Exhaust, Clean Undercarriage, and Documented Upgrades Why This Car Is Special The W140 S-Class is widely regarded as one of the most over-engineered production cars ever built. Mercedes spent over a billion Deutsche Marks developing it, and the 600SEL represented the absolute top of that range. When it arrived in 1992, it was the most technologically advanced and most expensive Mercedes-Benz you could buy. The 600SEL sat above the 500SEL in every meaningful way — bigger engine, more refinement, and a price tag that put it in direct competition with Rolls-Royce and Bentley at the time. The heart of the 600SEL is Mercedes-Benz's M120 engine, a 6.0-liter dual-overhead-cam V12 producing 389 horsepower and 420 lb-ft of torque. This was Mercedes' first V12 in decades, developed specifically for the W140 platform. The engine was famously smooth — twelve cylinders firing in sequence at nearly any RPM produces a character that no V8 can replicate. Mercedes engineers spent particular attention on NVH reduction in the W140, fitting the car with double-pane glass on the side windows and acoustic insulation throughout the body to create a cabin environment that was essentially silent at highway speeds. This particular 1992 Mercedes-Benz 600SEL wears black over black — a factory-correct, serious combination that suits the car's understated authority. It has been upgraded thoughtfully, with a Borla dual exhaust system that gives the M120 V12 an exhaust note you can actually hear without introducing any harshness, AMG-style alloy wheels, Continental performance tires, and documented repairs and upgrades on hand. The undercarriage has been put on a lift and photographed — it is clean and solid, which is the most important structural question on any three-decade-old German luxury car. The odometer shows 65,785 miles, visible in the photos. The 600SEL designation itself is worth understanding for buyers unfamiliar with pre-1994 Mercedes nomenclature. In 1992, Mercedes had not yet transitioned to the modern S-Class naming convention. The 600 referred to the engine displacement class, SEL indicated it was a long-wheelbase sedan with the full luxury specification. When Mercedes reorganized its naming system in 1994, cars like this became the S600 L. The W140 generation ran from 1991 through 1999, but the early cars like this 1992 model used the older designation and are considered by many enthusiasts to be the most honest expression of what Mercedes was trying to build — no compromises, cost be damned. Features List 6.0-liter M120 V12 engine, 389 horsepower 4-speed automatic transmission Borla dual exhaust system AMG-style alloy wheels Continental performance tires Black leather interior Burled walnut trim throughout cabin Memory power front seats Heated front seats Dual-zone automatic climate control Power sunroof Bose sound system Cruise control ABS brakes ASR traction control system Four-wheel disc brakes Power windows and power mirrors Soft-close doors Dual SRS airbags Tachometer V12 badging on exterior Clean undercarriage, photographed on lift Documents for recent repairs and upgrades on hand Mechanical The M120 6.0-liter V12 under the hood of this 1992 Mercedes-Benz 600SEL is one of the more impressive engines produced in the early 1990s. It displaces 5,987cc across twelve cylinders arranged in a 60-degree V configuration, with dual overhead camshafts per bank — four camshafts total. Power output was rated at 389 horsepower and 420 lb-ft of torque, delivered through a 4-speed automatic transmission. Mercedes paired this engine with a 4-speed automatic that was well-suited to the torque characteristics of the V12 — the engine produced enough low-end pull that the transmission rarely needed to hunt for gears. The Borla dual exhaust fitted to this car is a meaningful upgrade. Stock 600SELs used a muffling system that kept the V12 nearly inaudible at all times, which was appropriate for the original market but leaves later owners wondering what the engine actually sounds like. Borla's stainless steel construction is visible in the undercarriage photos, and the car exits dual polished tips. It gives the M120 a composed, deep tone without making the cabin any louder than the thick insulation already manages. The undercarriage photographs show a car that has been cared for. The floor pan, subframes, and suspension components are clean. There is no visible rot or crash repair evident in the underbody shots. The W140 platform used fully independent suspension front and rear, with a five-link rear setup that was advanced for its time and contributed significantly to the car's straight-line stability and cornering composure. Stopping power comes from four-wheel disc brakes with ABS, and the ASR traction

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