Soaked carpet
#1
AudiWorld Member
Thread Starter
Soaked carpet
Hi
I have found that despite using audi winter mats that my black seat floor is a pool of water due to snow dragged in by my kids. It is so bad it fogs the windows on the inside overnight. I should have got weather tech floor liners as I did for my a6 but I did not anticipate such a brutal winter. The audi oem rubber mats are overwhelmed and useless. I am ordering the weather tech mats (too late I know) but do you think i have damaged or caused my vehicle to rust or mold? The carpets are puddled due to constant snow this winter from kids in the back.
Thanks
I have found that despite using audi winter mats that my black seat floor is a pool of water due to snow dragged in by my kids. It is so bad it fogs the windows on the inside overnight. I should have got weather tech floor liners as I did for my a6 but I did not anticipate such a brutal winter. The audi oem rubber mats are overwhelmed and useless. I am ordering the weather tech mats (too late I know) but do you think i have damaged or caused my vehicle to rust or mold? The carpets are puddled due to constant snow this winter from kids in the back.
Thanks
Last edited by Mitch105; 02-15-2014 at 04:48 PM.
#2
AudiWorld Super User
Here's what I've done successfully. If you have a wet/dry vac, use it to get as much of the moisture out as possible. Then, take some towels and weight them down on the carpet for a couple of hours. Finally, set up a portable fan or two on high with the doors or windows open for a few hours. Do it as soon as possible to avoid any mold or mildew.
#3
AudiWorld Super User
+1
This basic procedure, or a dependable small heater in lieu of fan. Pretty much need a garage for this in winter; takes a day or so to dry if you first get them damped out with towels pretty well.
#4
AudiWorld Super User
A carpet steamer, about $25 for a half day rental from many supermarkets and hardware stores, will get the carpet clean and fairly dry. Clean being important to get out any mold that has started.
After you used one of those, typically you need to run leave the car with the windows cracked open, heater blasting on full for a few hours to finish fully drying them out. If one of the small ceramic heaters will get the car equally toasty, that could work too.
Damage? Probably not, unless enough water got in to reach into the wiring.
Either a teamer or a wetvac to remove as much of the moisture as you can, followed by lots of heat until it is thoroughly dry to the touch. "Just a little damp" is how they get moldy forever after.
You probably can also pour a bottle of high-proof (70 or better 90) isopropanol, plain "rubbing" alcohol with no additives or sugars in it, onto the carpet to help promote the drying as well. The alcohol evaporates faster, pulls water out with it, and kills crud. Just don't mix alcohol with sparks or heating coils, it is flammable.
After you used one of those, typically you need to run leave the car with the windows cracked open, heater blasting on full for a few hours to finish fully drying them out. If one of the small ceramic heaters will get the car equally toasty, that could work too.
Damage? Probably not, unless enough water got in to reach into the wiring.
Either a teamer or a wetvac to remove as much of the moisture as you can, followed by lots of heat until it is thoroughly dry to the touch. "Just a little damp" is how they get moldy forever after.
You probably can also pour a bottle of high-proof (70 or better 90) isopropanol, plain "rubbing" alcohol with no additives or sugars in it, onto the carpet to help promote the drying as well. The alcohol evaporates faster, pulls water out with it, and kills crud. Just don't mix alcohol with sparks or heating coils, it is flammable.
#5
AudiWorld Member
Thread Starter
A carpet steamer, about $25 for a half day rental from many supermarkets and hardware stores, will get the carpet clean and fairly dry. Clean being important to get out any mold that has started.
After you used one of those, typically you need to run leave the car with the windows cracked open, heater blasting on full for a few hours to finish fully drying them out. If one of the small ceramic heaters will get the car equally toasty, that could work too.
Damage? Probably not, unless enough water got in to reach into the wiring.
Either a teamer or a wetvac to remove as much of the moisture as you can, followed by lots of heat until it is thoroughly dry to the touch. "Just a little damp" is how they get moldy forever after.
You probably can also pour a bottle of high-proof (70 or better 90) isopropanol, plain "rubbing" alcohol with no additives or sugars in it, onto the carpet to help promote the drying as well. The alcohol evaporates faster, pulls water out with it, and kills crud. Just don't mix alcohol with sparks or heating coils, it is flammable.
After you used one of those, typically you need to run leave the car with the windows cracked open, heater blasting on full for a few hours to finish fully drying them out. If one of the small ceramic heaters will get the car equally toasty, that could work too.
Damage? Probably not, unless enough water got in to reach into the wiring.
Either a teamer or a wetvac to remove as much of the moisture as you can, followed by lots of heat until it is thoroughly dry to the touch. "Just a little damp" is how they get moldy forever after.
You probably can also pour a bottle of high-proof (70 or better 90) isopropanol, plain "rubbing" alcohol with no additives or sugars in it, onto the carpet to help promote the drying as well. The alcohol evaporates faster, pulls water out with it, and kills crud. Just don't mix alcohol with sparks or heating coils, it is flammable.
#6
We offer some great mats to fit the Q5 that will keep all that water away from your carpets.
Check them out here: http://www.edgemats.com/collections/...ent-floor-mats
Check them out here: http://www.edgemats.com/collections/...ent-floor-mats
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
Cmmartin23
Parts For Sale - Archive (NO NEW POSTS HERE)
26
08-23-2016 04:44 PM
ECS Tuning-Audi
A4 (B6 Platform) Discussion
0
09-30-2015 06:08 AM
ECS Tuning-Audi
A4 (B7 Platform) Discussion
0
09-29-2015 11:59 AM
ECS Tuning-Audi
S4 (B6 & B7 Platforms) Discussion
0
09-29-2015 11:54 AM