I thought the comment section of this post would be flooded with comments.
ba-dum-tss
cry
Hang it out to dry
Just move on 😂😂
Dont you just hate it when eric wishes you happy birthday but your birthday was yesterday smh
Happy birthday anyway.
Pray!!
You put it in a bowl of rice, but before you try to get out of the car
Have you tried putting it in rice?
Boil it at a nice temprature
And what if you really like the car, and you’ve got time to invest (and money) you could still build a racecar from it. I mean, interior smell? You scrap it anyway and put some Recaros in. Engine bay is full of dust? You scrap everything that is useless weight and clean the rest. And for electronics, I mean buy a tuneable ECU, upgrade everything that is dead. Because I heard inssurance don’t give you a penny and you can’t sell it anyway, so there is no better solution.
The issue with repairing a vehicle that’s been flooded is that if often costs more time, money, and effort than it would just to replace the vehicle. If you’re insistent on keeping the vehicle, for whatever reason, great. Just know that it may cost more in the long run and may never ben whole again. If you’re OK with that, go for it.
Comments
If salt water you get rid of it
I thought the comment section of this post would be flooded with comments.
ba-dum-tss
Just move on 😂😂
Dont you just hate it when eric wishes you happy birthday but your birthday was yesterday smh
Happy birthday anyway.
Pray!!
You put it in a bowl of rice, but before you try to get out of the car
Have you tried putting it in rice?
Boil it at a nice temprature
And what if you really like the car, and you’ve got time to invest (and money) you could still build a racecar from it. I mean, interior smell? You scrap it anyway and put some Recaros in. Engine bay is full of dust? You scrap everything that is useless weight and clean the rest. And for electronics, I mean buy a tuneable ECU, upgrade everything that is dead. Because I heard inssurance don’t give you a penny and you can’t sell it anyway, so there is no better solution.
The issue with repairing a vehicle that’s been flooded is that if often costs more time, money, and effort than it would just to replace the vehicle. If you’re insistent on keeping the vehicle, for whatever reason, great. Just know that it may cost more in the long run and may never ben whole again. If you’re OK with that, go for it.