Windows Misting Up on Gen1 Cayman
Windows Misting Up on Gen1 Cayman
Author
Discussion

Montcoffer

Original Poster:

244 posts

215 months

Wednesday 21st December 2016
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Before anyone asks, the recycle button is not on..............my wife's Cayman which we've had from new (2007) has today decided to mist up its windscreen real severely. took 20mins to just about clear windscreen with side windows still dripping wet.
Had a quick play tonight & all the controls for fan, temperature, quick clear button all appear to be operating normally, aircon gets cold, but there is a slight odd whiff of damp air in the car? Has anyone experienced the same?, could I have a heat exchanger failure?, no damp patches on carpet.
That's my limited mechanical guesses exhausted.

Glassman

24,247 posts

236 months

Wednesday 21st December 2016
quotequote all
That's a lot of water trying to get out.

Has it had a new windscreen? Is there a sunroof? Could one of the door windows have been left open?

turboteeth

354 posts

183 months

Wednesday 21st December 2016
quotequote all
Check to see if the bottom of the door cards are wet...

It may have the leak issue which will cause the car to steam up!

finestjammy

741 posts

194 months

Wednesday 21st December 2016
quotequote all
turboteeth said:
Check to see if the bottom of the door cards are wet...

It may have the leak issue which will cause the car to steam up!
+1

I had similar symptoms when the door membrane seals started to fail.

Pope

2,653 posts

268 months

Wednesday 21st December 2016
quotequote all
The carpets may feel dry - if water gets in it goes under the carpet into the foam/sponge on the underside - it can easily hold a few litres and still feel dry on top. Put seats forward and lift the floor carpet where it meets the vertical carpet at the rear.

t955daytona

314 posts

204 months

Wednesday 21st December 2016
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Before you try anything else change the pollen filter for a new one. A girl at work had the same issue with a TT and after I had cleaned out the pollen filter and put a fresh one in it has cleared it up a treat.

kev b

2,755 posts

187 months

Wednesday 21st December 2016
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Seconding changing the pollen filter, seen this a lot on various cars.

Montcoffer

Original Poster:

244 posts

215 months

Thursday 22nd December 2016
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Thanks for advice, much appreciated. I'll post again when/if I find the cause.

gsewell

718 posts

304 months

Thursday 22nd December 2016
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If I remember correctly, Porsche switch off the aircon when the ambient temp drops below 5'C (or thereabouts). This means that any humidity is only pushed out by warm airflow. The result is that if you have been driving the car and then let it cool, the relative humidity is high enough to cause condensation and yes, this takes time to clear away.

boxsey

3,579 posts

231 months

Thursday 22nd December 2016
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Pope said:
The carpets may feel dry - if water gets in it goes under the carpet into the foam/sponge on the underside - it can easily hold a few litres and still feel dry on top. Put seats forward and lift the floor carpet where it meets the vertical carpet at the rear.
Pope, does the Cayman have rear drains that need checking just like similar boxsters do?

Pope

2,653 posts

268 months

Thursday 22nd December 2016
quotequote all
No roof drains as the rear is fixed; runoff is taken down the sides of the lid aperture and out across/through the rear bumper.