Found out my MSP doesnt like the taste of water

tmadmsp

Member
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2003.5 MSP
So i got stranded in a major rain storm today and was trying to get home before the hail got any bigger when i hit a huge puddle i didnt see and my car got a huge drink of water and died on the spot. let it dry out enough to start it back up and babied it on the way home. anything i should do other than let it dry out before i start driving it again?
 
Usually i drive my beater in bad weather but got caught off guard with this one. Had a splash guard but a racoon got wrapped up in it at 70mph and it was left on the highway. Where can I find a by pass?
 
yup, AEM makes them. theyre fairly expensive though... i think i also have one laying around if interested. PM me.

by the way, youre lucky you were able to start it again...
 
IIRC u cant use a bypass with a turbo

why not? if the bypass is on the intake piping, its not a boost leak, and if its before the MAF its not allowing un-metered air in.

Anyways, do you think water made it past the turbo? if so check your oil to make sure it didnt get into the cylinders and then run down past the rings while u were letting it dry out.
 
why not? if the bypass is on the intake piping, its not a boost leak, and if its before the MAF its not allowing un-metered air in.

Anyways, do you think water made it past the turbo? if so check your oil to make sure it didnt get into the cylinders and then run down past the rings while u were letting it dry out.

because they are not made to handle that amount of air passing through them, plus on blow off air can move the opposite way

again, im only recallin this from memory
 
I don't know much about turbo setups. I know the basics that's it. Ill build you a motor but ill leave the turbo mechanics up to those with the knowledge. I have noticed most turbo setups are short ram, I guess that would be why
 
Ummm, I'd also do an oil change as well. The last thing you want is water/oil mix running through your engine. That will tear up seals very fast. And damage the turbo when it heats up.
 
thats because most turbo setups use an intercooler so the use of a CAI is pretty much unneccessary....the air is getting heated up regardless of where it came from by passing through the turbo and all ends up in the intercooler. SRI is the way to go...easier.
I don't know much about turbo setups. I know the basics that's it. Ill build you a motor but ill leave the turbo mechanics up to those with the knowledge. I have noticed most turbo setups are short ram, I guess that would be why
 
I love my cai in traffic (datalogged much lower intake temps) and can switch to sri in about 1min if needed for the lovely flooding we get occasionally :)

Pull the maf and carefully dry it out with some compressed air.
 
pretty much if you have a cai then you need to just drive slow threw any water. sri, you can go a little faster threw water. Either way, you should always take it slow threw standing water. I've seen cars get the ecu fryed by going into puddles. Even trucks. So just take it slow when going threw water. Thats just my .02
 
pretty much if you have a cai then you need to just drive slow threw any water. sri, you can go a little faster threw water. Either way, you should always take it slow threw standing water. I've seen cars get the ecu fryed by going into puddles. Even trucks. So just take it slow when going threw water. Thats just my .02

I just elect not to drive through water at all. Thats what I have a boat for.

As for the CAI being "pointless" every little bit helps, but I agree, not worth the risk of hydrolocking.

Change your oil... better safe than sorry.
 

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