another wet mat dealer story
I brought my car to the dealer wed just before my 3yr/50,000 mile warrantee ran out for the wet drivers side mat. I have read the posts about the boot and cracked seals and don’t seem to be the problem. The first thing the dealer told me was that if it was my fault due to mods (switches running from the fog lights to inside my car) There would be a $160 charge, I told him that this leak was going on long before I did the mods and to check where it was coming from but he seamed already convinced that there would be a charge (dealers love to blame there own problems on mods).
Well he called me and told me he did a powder test (not to mention that under my dash now is full of powder) and found that the only leak was coming from the small hole in the boot where the wires were going into the car. The boot where the wires are coming from is at the top of the car on the driver’s side in the corner. The only way I can see if water was coming from here is if my car was submerged under water at least 4 feet high cause the wheel well is under the boot and the side of the car is next to it. And the hole is no bigger than 4 wires going into it. Also where the hole goes into the car the mat isn’t wet there. Now I value your input so here are some picks I took and let me know if it is at all possible that this can cause my mat to get soaked.
http://home.si.rr.com/zadam123/boot3.jpg
http://home.si.rr.com/zadam123/boot2.jpg
http://home.si.rr.com/zadam123/boot1.jpg
and as for the floor powder heres how they gave me my car back
http://home.si.rr.com/zadam123/floor.jpg
I am going out today to silicone that hole and give my car a good hosing down to see if the mat still gets wet, if it does I think the dealer will be surprised to find out I am disputing the $160 charge he gave me. :(
How they found and fixed it.
OK, here's what they did to locate the leak.
1) they applied heavy car-washing foam to the exterior of the windshield and surrounding area.
2) one guy stands outside of the VX and watches them foam while another gets inside the VX and blows compressed air around the windshield and under the dash.
3) when bubbles appear, they've found the location of the leak.
The leak in my VX appeared along an area just below the lower winshield seal and the A-post. Which is why, at first,. they concluded it must be a windshield seal.
To get to the leak, the dealer carefully loosened the cowling surrounding the windshield wiper mechanism. I think this is a plate held-down by 4 phillips-head screws. They carefully bent the cowling out of the way from near the hood hinge, respecting the limits of its elasticity, and were able to find the small gap in the welding and seal it (No fenders were molested in this scenario).
I asked my service rep, who is a former Isuzu regional rep, about VX4EJR's observation of an offset in the moulding and whether it might be a persistent occurrence for the VX. Having seen Isuzu's Japanese production process, he says "if it appears in one, it likely appears in others, since Japanese auto production is remarkably consistent, right-down to the "signature" work of individuals who might assemble a vehicle like the VX that has so much hand-craftmanship".
VX4EJR, if you are able to establish a connection between your observation and a potential offset in the body assembly, I now know of at least one long-time Isuzu-man that would be very interested in learning-about your findings. From his interest, I inferred that even if the VX is no longer in production, letting Isuzu know where design and/or production performance gaps occur, helps them build better products in the future.