1998 Mercedes-Benz SL-Class

1998 Mercedes-Benz SL-Class 2 Dr SL500 SL1 Sport Convertible
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Fuel economy: N/A
True Cost to Own®: Not available

Used TMV from $10,358

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What Edmunds Says

Not Available

Pros

Fast, good looking and oozing with style.

Cons

Incorrigible gas hog. Steep price tag.

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Available Models

Use the Edmunds Pricing System to help you get the best deal:

SL500 SL1 Sport

  • 5.0L V8 engine 
  • Automatic transmission 
  • Side/Curtain Airbags 
  • Stability Control 
  • Traction Control 

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Used TMV from $11,988

APPRAISE YOUR CAR submodelindex:0,make:Mercedes-Benz, submodel:SL-Class, year:1998, trim.trimName:SL500 SL1 Sport, zip:nozip

SL600

  • 6.0L V12 engine 
  • Automatic transmission 
  • Side/Curtain Airbags 
  • Stability Control 
  • Traction Control 

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Used TMV from $12,521

APPRAISE YOUR CAR submodelindex:1,make:Mercedes-Benz, submodel:SL-Class, year:1998, trim.trimName:SL600, zip:nozip

SL600 SL1 Sport

  • 6.0L V12 engine 
  • Automatic transmission 
  • Side/Curtain Airbags 
  • Stability Control 
  • Traction Control 

View All Features & Specs

Used TMV from $13,160

APPRAISE YOUR CAR submodelindex:2,make:Mercedes-Benz, submodel:SL-Class, year:1998, trim.trimName:SL600 SL1 Sport, zip:nozip

SL500

  • 5.0L V8 engine 
  • Automatic transmission 
  • Side/Curtain Airbags 
  • Stability Control 
  • Traction Control 

View All Features & Specs

Used TMV from $10,358

APPRAISE YOUR CAR submodelindex:3,make:Mercedes-Benz, submodel:SL-Class, year:1998, trim.trimName:SL500, zip:nozip

What's New for 1998

The bargain basement SL320 was discontinued this year.

Review

For years, the classic roadster to own was the Mercedes 450SL. From 1973 to 1989, Mercedes peddled so many of these convertibles to the rich and famous that they became as ubiquitous as cocaine vials at high-society social events. Then, Mercedes revamped its classic, upping the technological ante by light years over the old car. The redone SL has been available in three styles since then; 320-, 500- and 600- Series droptops. This year sees the departure of the SL320 as Mercedes' trims the fat from its super car lineup.

The SL600 is a whompin' V12 two-door roadster. The SL isn't merely a CL600 coupe with no roof. It is lighter and more nimble. The bloodline it shares with the gargantuan CL-Class is the 6.0-liter V12 that makes 389 horsepower and moves the car with authority. Stuffed into the SL, the V12 is a better performer and costs less than its big brother coupe, but at a stupendous $125,000, that's kind of a moot point.

The ... ahem, lowly SL500 is the more reasonably priced and more popular Mercedes roadster. Prices for the SL500 have fallen dramatically for the second year in a row; much more reasonablly priced in 1998 at just under $80,000. So, do you get less car for your smaller payment? No. The SL500 has gained equipment since then.

We don't think you should go for the SL600. The SL500 is just as good, and better in some respects, than its more muscular brother. And with your savings you could get a Jeep Grand Cherokee for the kids to take to Keg-A-Beer University in the fall. If it comes to that, however, even the SL500 doesn't offer particularly good value when compared to the all-new SLK, which features a retractable hardtop and outstanding performance at half the price.

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