What I would do is first put some fans in the car for 8-12
hours (until the carpet and upholstery doesn't feel wet
anymore).
Then buy a couple gallons of silica cat litter (make sure it's
pure silica and _not_ the clay stuff) and spread that out on
the floor, seats, under the seats, etc. Keep the top and
windows up for a day or two to allow the silica to absorb water
from the air in the car and help dry it out. Scoop/vacuum up
the silica. You can bake the silica at a low temperature to
dry it out, and then it can be reused.
Repeat the silica treatment until the car no longer seems humid
inside.
Do not eat!
--
Grant Edwards grante Yow! Please come home with
at me ... I have Tylenol!!
visi.com
What he said.
Also, I would clean up any exposed electrical system connectors as well
as possible and put some electrical contact grease in them, especially
the wires going to the fuel pump since it took a really good soaking
through the open window.
It may be worth removing the seats and taking them inside to help dry
out and to expose the carpet to help it dry and maybe to treat it.
There is some type of anti-mildew treatment to put on the seats and
carpet, but I forget what it is called.
A carpet place should be able to help you. I have never used it but have
heard good things about it, whatever it is called.
"Carefully" running a space heater inside the car to help dry it out is
another option that has helped dry out a few wet convertibles that I
have dealt with in the past.
Are the seats leather or cloth? I would treat the steering wheel with a
leather treatment, and if you have leather seats, then I would treat
those too, though the seat backs are vinyl.
Good luck!
Pat
> "Carefully" running a space heater inside the car to help dry it out is
> another option that has helped dry out a few wet convertibles that I
> have dealt with in the past.
A road-trip to somewhere very dry for a few days might also be
an option. The Mojave is nice this time of year. :)
--
Grant Edwards grante Yow! My mind is a potato
at field ...
visi.com
>I'm starting to smell some mildew. Any cure for that?
Clothes pin on the nose?
Sorry, couldn't resist...
-- Larry 8') / 2
Do not eat!
Oh man, that's why I love this newsgroup! lol, Crazy thing is that he
probably lifted that phrase directly from some part of the bag!
Chris
99BBB
"Frank Berger" <frank.d...@dal.frb.org> wrote in message
news:naidnWAt-91oi1fX...@supernews.com...
Thanks for the advice.
I've got an electric dehumidifier. It cost me about $150 (this one,
cheaper here: http://salestores.com/frigid61.html) and requires a line
to a power outlet. This is a handy home appliance if you live in Lutz,
Florida, the damp but lovely town right next to the town called "Land
O'Lakes." I've put it in my Miata overnight on a couple of occasions
when I neglected to put the top up, and after a day or so it was
absolutely bone dry like I had parked it in Tucson with the windows
open.
Through the Florida monsoon season, to deal with the mustiness that
accumulates in the car, I switch this between under a car seat and the
trunk:
It's a plastic box about the size of a trade paperback filled with bits
of silica, tinted with cobalt chloride which turns blue when dry, pink
when damp. There's a little window in it so you can see what color the
silica bits are. On the back is an electric plug that folds out. When
it has absorbed enough water that the silica is pink (this takes three
or four days during the rainy season), you plug it into a wall socket
for a few hours, and the 20 watt heater inside drives off the water so
the silica turns blue. Since I started using this thing, my car
interior doesn't smell like an old pair of sneakers all through May and
June and tools in the trunk don't rust.
Doesn't do anything about those g-d mosquitos. though. Tropical
Florida, sheesh! I miss snow.
yrs WDK
Tucson has a hi-humidity monson season too. Just so you know, next time
you're parking there. ;)
miker