Source of leak in passenger footwell
#1
Source of leak in passenger footwell
Hi, hope someone can help me.
I have a 2006 Mazda Verisa, and have been getting substantial water in the passenger foot-well.
Finally traced what I think is the source of the leak to water seeping through a sponge-like seal in the object pictured below.
It is in the center of the car under the dashboard. But I don't know what this is, looks like some kind of conduit for something.
It does not look like the seal is supposed to be watertight so I am thinking water is getting in some where under the hood and dripping down to here.
Any idea what this is and where the source of the leak could be?
Thanks
I have a 2006 Mazda Verisa, and have been getting substantial water in the passenger foot-well.
Finally traced what I think is the source of the leak to water seeping through a sponge-like seal in the object pictured below.
It is in the center of the car under the dashboard. But I don't know what this is, looks like some kind of conduit for something.
It does not look like the seal is supposed to be watertight so I am thinking water is getting in some where under the hood and dripping down to here.
Any idea what this is and where the source of the leak could be?
Thanks
#4
Forgot to mention that the water is clean (ie not coolant) and appears after it has been raining, so pretty sure it is getting in from the outside, rather than from aircon.
Am thinking that rainwater is dripping down from the top of that conduit, so want to know what it is, and where it goes.
Am thinking that rainwater is dripping down from the top of that conduit, so want to know what it is, and where it goes.
#6
Hi, hope someone can help me.
I have a 2006 Mazda Verisa, and have been getting substantial water in the passenger foot-well.
Finally traced what I think is the source of the leak to water seeping through a sponge-like seal in the object pictured below.
It is in the center of the car under the dashboard. But I don't know what this is, looks like some kind of conduit for something.
It does not look like the seal is supposed to be watertight so I am thinking water is getting in some where under the hood and dripping down to here.
Any idea what this is and where the source of the leak could be?
Thanks
Visit Autoguysland to review more issues of overcharged AC system.
I have a 2006 Mazda Verisa, and have been getting substantial water in the passenger foot-well.
Finally traced what I think is the source of the leak to water seeping through a sponge-like seal in the object pictured below.
It is in the center of the car under the dashboard. But I don't know what this is, looks like some kind of conduit for something.
It does not look like the seal is supposed to be watertight so I am thinking water is getting in some where under the hood and dripping down to here.
Any idea what this is and where the source of the leak could be?
Thanks
Visit Autoguysland to review more issues of overcharged AC system.
#8
Do you have a sunroof?
I had a similar problem with my Jeep years ago; mysterious puddle of water reappearing, soaking the carpet on the passenger floor pan.
Turned out that the drain holes in the corners of my sunroof gutter were blocked with leaves and other debris. The drains were connected to tubing that ran internally down the “A” pillars and would drain underneath the vehicle near the jack point behind the front wheels. Whenever it rained or whenever I washed the car, water would fill up the sunroof gutter area and because it couldn’t flow through the drain tube, the water level would get high enough to spill into the roof area above the headliner, flow down inside the “A” pillar (not in the tube) and drain onto the floor, getting everything behind the glove box and kick panel wet. So wet that I was convinced that the source was from one of the components under the dash.
The drain tube was so full of crud that I inserted a small tube at the top opening in the sunroof and blew the blockage right out the bottom of the car. Word of caution: don’t be tempted to use an air compressor to do this, otherwise it’ll blow the tubing off the fittings and you’ll spend your afternoon tearing into your headliner to reattach the tubing. (Don’t ask me how I know this.)
I discovered that the bottom of the tube under the vehicle terminated with a pinched-like fitting that resembled the mouthpiece of a saxophone. This design clearly contributed to the blockage. Determined to never let this happen to me ever again, I outsmarted the engineer who designed this troublesome part and I cut that bottom end off the drain tube so that it could drain freely.
I was quite proud of myself right up until the first time I got up to highway speed after my modification. At 70mph, the cabin was filled with this flute-like whistling noise that changed pitch with speed. I immediately realized what the useless piece on the bottom of that drain tube was designed to do, or in this case, prevent.
The good news: no more water problem.
I had a similar problem with my Jeep years ago; mysterious puddle of water reappearing, soaking the carpet on the passenger floor pan.
Turned out that the drain holes in the corners of my sunroof gutter were blocked with leaves and other debris. The drains were connected to tubing that ran internally down the “A” pillars and would drain underneath the vehicle near the jack point behind the front wheels. Whenever it rained or whenever I washed the car, water would fill up the sunroof gutter area and because it couldn’t flow through the drain tube, the water level would get high enough to spill into the roof area above the headliner, flow down inside the “A” pillar (not in the tube) and drain onto the floor, getting everything behind the glove box and kick panel wet. So wet that I was convinced that the source was from one of the components under the dash.
The drain tube was so full of crud that I inserted a small tube at the top opening in the sunroof and blew the blockage right out the bottom of the car. Word of caution: don’t be tempted to use an air compressor to do this, otherwise it’ll blow the tubing off the fittings and you’ll spend your afternoon tearing into your headliner to reattach the tubing. (Don’t ask me how I know this.)
I discovered that the bottom of the tube under the vehicle terminated with a pinched-like fitting that resembled the mouthpiece of a saxophone. This design clearly contributed to the blockage. Determined to never let this happen to me ever again, I outsmarted the engineer who designed this troublesome part and I cut that bottom end off the drain tube so that it could drain freely.
I was quite proud of myself right up until the first time I got up to highway speed after my modification. At 70mph, the cabin was filled with this flute-like whistling noise that changed pitch with speed. I immediately realized what the useless piece on the bottom of that drain tube was designed to do, or in this case, prevent.
The good news: no more water problem.
#9
Finally traced what I think is the source of the leak to water seeping through a sponge-like seal in the object pictured below.
It is in the center of the car under the dashboard. But I don't know what this is, looks like some kind of conduit for something.
It does not look like the seal is supposed to be watertight so I am thinking water is getting in some where under the hood and dripping down to here.
Any idea what this is and where the source of the leak could be?
Thanks
did you ever get this fixed? I have traced my leak down to the same area but I’m water tight when it rains. Mine is coming from a slow draining ac line that cannot seem to keep up with the condensation. I have lifted the car a few times to locate the drain outlet under the car but it is non accessible because of the heat shield for the catalytic converter. This seems to leave me with the only option to partially pull off exhaust to gain access to the drain hole.
has anyone else found an easier way to snake or clean out this drain line in older verisa and Demio cars? @Brittany Gaines
any updates would be great from @Brittany Gaines or @AllanMurrayNZ
thanks
#10
Plumbers Putty
Hi, I had the same issue with my Mazda Demio. I used plumbers putty to completely seal up the area over the spongy material. I sealed from the solid plastic to the metal and it does the trick.