Water retention in the doors...

Water retention in the doors...

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shoggoth1

Original Poster:

815 posts

266 months

Thursday 30th May 2002
quotequote all
...and how to avoid.

You may notice that on the underside of each door there are 3 holes.

These may be finished off with nice plastc plugs - remove them.

The holes are there for 2 reasons, they allow access to the bolts that hold the interior trim panel on and they allow water to exit. The window, where it meets the door, is not a perfect seal (it's not meant to be) and don't worry about the electrics they are protected within the door by a rubber curtain.

Apparently, someone in the finishing department at the factory started fitting these plugs (to finish the door off I assume?). Hence , you leave the car in the driveway (like me) and it rains overnight. The next morning you are fitting your overmats (like me) and think to yourself 'the doors don't usually slosh'. You get on your hands and knees, find said plugs (like me) and pull one out. Now (like me) you're kneeling in a puddle of water with a 'slosh' free door.

The danger is that if the car is left out (with plugs left in) and it rains heavily then the water in the door could reach a level where it will interfere with the electrics, and we don't want that.

The above advice is from the dealer/factory, passed on for your motoring edification and delight.

Cheers.

shoggoth1

Original Poster:

815 posts

266 months

Thursday 30th May 2002
quotequote all
They're low enough on the Tamora, right along the very bottom of the door. Each about an inch in diameter.

Cheers.

shoggoth1

Original Poster:

815 posts

266 months

Thursday 30th May 2002
quotequote all
Early cars won't have them (my dealers first demonstrator never did apparently - there new one does, or did rather). You would assume that the practice will stop now, so it's newish cars that are affected.

Why the window seal's not water tight in the first place - I don't know, because it's hard to do? I've seen cars before that have drain holes (or slits) in the doors. The point is that this is a design 'feature' and you should not be concerned about the window motor, locking mechanism, etc. because they are protected internally.

Cheers.