Skip to content

MOT reliability

Mercedes-benz Camper conversion

7 vehicles · 64 completed MOT tests analysed
66%
MOT pass rate

Based on 7 Mercedes-benz Camper conversion vehicles and 64 completed MOT tests, the Mercedes-benz Camper conversion has an overall 66% pass rate, with an average recorded mileage of 362,499 miles.

7
Vehicles
64
MOT tests
5,777
Avg miles / year
3.3
Faults per test
2%
Dangerous-fault share

Mercedes-benz Camper conversion problem areas

Where faults occur most across all Mercedes-benz Camper conversion MOT tests:

  • Brakes29%
  • Other22%
  • Tyres, wheels & suspension22%
  • Lamps & electrical11%
  • Body & structure8%
  • Seatbelts & equipment5%
  • Steering4%
  • Emissions & nuisance2%

Mercedes-benz Camper conversion pass rate by age

Age (years)TestsPass rate
11100%
21100%
33100%
42100%
5367%
6367%
7367%
8367%
9250%
101100%
11475%
12450%
13367%
14450%
15450%
16560%
17250%
183100%
19250%
201100%

Fuel types: Diesel (7)

Most common Mercedes-benz Camper conversion MOT faults

These are the faults and advisories recorded most often across Mercedes-benz Camper conversion MOT tests:

  1. Nearside Rear Anti-roll bar linkage pin or bush worn but not resulting in excessive movement (5.3.4 (a) (i)) (6 times)
  2. Front Brake disc worn, but not excessively (1.1.14 (a) (i)) (6 times)
  3. Parking brake efficiency below requirements (1.4.2 (a) (i)) (5 times)
  4. Offside Rear Anti-roll bar linkage pin or bush worn but not resulting in excessive movement (5.3.4 (a) (i)) (4 times)
  5. Rear Brake disc worn, pitted or scored, but not seriously weakened (1.1.14 (a) (ii)) (4 times)
  6. Offside Front Tyre worn close to legal limit/worn on edge (5.2.3 (e)) (3 times)
  7. Offside Suspension arm has slight play in a ball joint (2.4.G.2) (3 times)
  8. Offside Front Suspension arm ball joint has slight play (5.3.4 (a) (i)) (3 times)
  9. Offside Rear fog lamp not working (4.5.1 (a) (ii)) (3 times)
  10. Front Brake pipe corroded, covered in grease or other material to rear x2 (1.1.11 (c)) (3 times)
  11. Offside Rear Inner Tyre obviously under inflated (5.2.3 (l)) (3 times)
  12. Nearside Rear Service brake binding but not excessively (1.2.1 (f)) (2 times)
  13. Offside Rear Rear reflector missing (4.8.2 (a) (ii)) (2 times)
  14. Air gauges do not operate, low air light working (2 times)
  15. Front Air brake cylinder/actuator corroded but not seriously weakened Front chambers slightly corroded (1.1.16 (d) (i)) (2 times)

Mercedes-benz Camper conversion pass rate by registration year

YearVehiclesTestsPass rateAvg mileage
2017 1 10 70%
2016 1 1 100% 263,465
2008 1 15 73% 138,189
2005 1 26 62% 177,141
2004 1 4 75% 864,220
2000 1 6 50% 545,892
1993 1 2 50% 186,092

Mercedes-benz Camper conversion reliability FAQ

Across 7 Mercedes-benz Camper conversion vehicles in our MOT data, 66% pass the MOT (a 34% failure rate), with about 3.3 faults or advisories recorded per test.

The most frequently recorded Mercedes-benz Camper conversion MOT issues are: Nearside Rear Anti-roll bar linkage pin or bush worn but not resulting in excessive movement (5.3.4 (a) (i)); Front Brake disc worn, but not excessively (1.1.14 (a) (i)); Parking brake efficiency below requirements (1.4.2 (a) (i)).

The typical Mercedes-benz Camper conversion in our data has covered around 362,499 miles.

Compare the Mercedes-benz Camper conversion

See how the Mercedes-benz Camper conversion stacks up against other Mercedes-benz models on MOT reliability:


Check a specific Mercedes-benz Camper conversion

Enter a registration to see that exact vehicle's full MOT history, advisories and recurring faults.

See all Mercedes-benz models · Learn about common MOT failures · what an MOT checks