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What to do with flood damaged vehicles?

digger242j

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Joined
Oct 31, 2003
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6,646
Location
Southwestern PA
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Self employed excavator
The guys from the snowplowing-contractors.com forum have seen this already, but we have a different set of members here, and I'm open to any good advice.

Ivan hit the Pittsburgh area pretty hard. There was lots of flooding in low lying areas.

This is a 96 Chevy with 70-some thousand miles. It was at a service station for it's State Inspection. It now has brand new stickers, a new gas tank and sending unit, some new brake lines, and a fresh starter. It was ready to go on Thursday evening. Friday, it rained....

What can be done with flood damaged vehicles?

We don't know whether the insurance company is going to total it--this is a new experience. If not, what needs to be done? If it is totalled, is there anything to be gained by buying it back from the insurance company and getting it roadworthy again, or is it a lost cause?

As the pics will show, the water was above the dashboard....
 

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Electra_Glide

Senior Member
Joined
Aug 25, 2004
Messages
273
Location
Western Pennsylvania
Digger,

Sorry to hear about your truck...

If the insurance company will total it, I'd let it go.

Lots of work to get it running again, and there's nothing to say that once you get it going it isn't going to give you constant problems.

Good luck, and let us know how it turns out.

Joe
 

will_gurt

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Nov 30, 2003
Messages
163
Location
southwestern ,PA
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operator in extended holding pattern
Originally posted by Electra_Glide
Digger,

Sorry to hear about your truck...

If the insurance company will total it, I'd let it go.

Lots of work to get it running again, and there's nothing to say that once you get it going it isn't going to give you constant problems.

Good luck, and let us know how it turns out.

Joe

To start with all the lubricants in the differentials and transmission/tranfer case along with the engine will have to be changed. Computers for the engine control as well.

Wiring connections are another issue too.

I agree with electra glide, if the insurance company totals it let them keep the headache.
 

DennisJonesCon.

Active Member
Joined
Jun 26, 2004
Messages
28
Location
East TN
Occupation
All construction
flooded

Flooded vehicles are not worth the trouble. Everything under the hood will soon die. We tried to salvage a car from the '93 "no-name" storm. It liked to break us 1 dollar at a time.
 

greywynd

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 25, 2005
Messages
225
Location
Peterborough, Ontario
We had a local storm last year that flooded large portions of the town near here. A lot of people tried to 'resurrect' their cars.....and ended up scrapping them eventually. A lot of the newer cars/trucks have electronis tucked all over, and they never got them to work right, or kept having things go wrong afterwards. Airbag controls are often mounted under the seats, a lot of them were wrote off by insurance because they had no way of knowing if the airbag would still work in an accident.

Friend of mine works at a wrecking yard.....they didn't even know what they were going to do with them, a lot of them sat for some time because the insurance companies were overloaded with claims....also there was some sewage in the water, not all of it was straight rainwater. Most of the wreckers were declining to wrench on them because they were worried about getting sick (some of them it was just the smell alone)
 

digger242j

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Oct 31, 2003
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Location
Southwestern PA
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Self employed excavator
Aw, geez. I wish you hadn't reminded me of that thing. :crying (Looking at the pictures reminded me of the smell.)

I apologize for never having posted the outcome of the event here.

I found it listed in the Truck Trader sometime later. The salvage place had a website, and they had a good picture of it. No question that it was the same truck. They took the plow mount off. I couldn't tell what they did otherwise, but it looked real clean.

S 9231- 96 CHEVROLET K3500 REG CAB Tk 71 K 4x4/5.7-V8/Auto/AC/G.Bags - 8' Bed - White- Deep Flood 5500.00

I just looked at the website, and it's no longer listed. I hope somebody is having good luck with it.

I bet there are going to be *a lot* of flood damaged vehicles on the market real soon.
 

MECHTRONIK

Member
Joined
Sep 17, 2009
Messages
14
Location
australia
Have any of you guys stripped down any heavy equipment after a flood
I would be interested to know if any mud got into the transmission case through the breather and if all the oil was displaced by water
Also if the water head was high did the air intake filters collapse flooding the turbo and cylinders
And what recovery proceedures worked or failed in the short term
Also did you find water or mud inside the ECU and TCU case
 
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