Water Leaks
Posted: Sat Oct 30, 2021 10:34 am
I found two good write-ups here on water leaks from the doors(http://www.pontiacbonnevilleclub.com/fo ... 11470.html) and sunroof (http://www.pontiacbonnevilleclub.com/fo ... c1688.html). I just bought this car and it sat out in the rain. Now the rear driver side door and the front passenger door trigger the door ajar and interior lights on. I pulled the driver seat and found water pooled on the floor under the carpet. I also found signs of water coming in behind the trim panel on the passenger front door. So, I know I have at least one door to pull apart and reseal for water.
Am I correct that I will need to pull half the interior apart to diagnose the sunroof drains? Looks like I do need to pull the carpet to dry it all, so I'm halfway there. Plus, I need to replace the headliner, so I guess I may need to do those sooner than I wanted.
Is it possible to seal the sunroof completely, disable it (unplug the switch seems easiest), and not have to worry about the water?
If I chose to have a shop do all this, what do expect the hours to be. Let's assume drain lines and two doors. I have a garage, but it's not heated.
Background is I bought this as a high-mileage, reliable car with some known and acceptable issues (after market cat throws codes, O2 doesn't, and a couple other small issues). It's never been driven in winter, which in Michigan means I can close the door without leaving piles of rust. The interior, other than the driver's seat and headliner, is in pretty good shape. Body has a couple dings and the rear light housings have some cracks. As a second car, it's pretty OK, except the indoor pool on the floor. Debating finding someone to tear it apart and fix the doors and sunroof drain, wiring, and clean the thing up nice vs. doing it myself. WIth kids, coaching, full time + work, I'm at a crossroads.
Am I correct that I will need to pull half the interior apart to diagnose the sunroof drains? Looks like I do need to pull the carpet to dry it all, so I'm halfway there. Plus, I need to replace the headliner, so I guess I may need to do those sooner than I wanted.
Is it possible to seal the sunroof completely, disable it (unplug the switch seems easiest), and not have to worry about the water?
If I chose to have a shop do all this, what do expect the hours to be. Let's assume drain lines and two doors. I have a garage, but it's not heated.
Background is I bought this as a high-mileage, reliable car with some known and acceptable issues (after market cat throws codes, O2 doesn't, and a couple other small issues). It's never been driven in winter, which in Michigan means I can close the door without leaving piles of rust. The interior, other than the driver's seat and headliner, is in pretty good shape. Body has a couple dings and the rear light housings have some cracks. As a second car, it's pretty OK, except the indoor pool on the floor. Debating finding someone to tear it apart and fix the doors and sunroof drain, wiring, and clean the thing up nice vs. doing it myself. WIth kids, coaching, full time + work, I'm at a crossroads.