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Wade Gattett Wade Gattett is offline
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Default Can a flooded alternator stop a car from running immediately

On 9/4/19 3:14 PM, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
On 9/4/2019 2:15 PM, micky wrote:
My brother lives on a barrier island** and 3 or 4 times a year, there is
a king tide that floods not only the beach but the main north/south
street.Â* In many parts of the island, there are no parallel streets with
which to bypass the flooded one (and come to think, all of them would be
flooded too.)

One time years ago he tried to drive through and his recollection is
that the car stalled right away and wouldn't start, and the shop said he
needed a new alternator, and after they replaced that things worked.

Shouldn't the battery have been enough to power the car for a day or so?

Or is it possible with salt-water to short the alternator so that the
battery won't run the car at all?


**Hollywood, Florida.Â*Â* My brother is no liberal, probably a
conservative, but he says that he's seen global warming first hand.Â* I
don't think the street flooded at all the first years they lived there,
certainly not as often.

Had an alternator go out and I got just a couple of miles.Â* If you know
is dies you can shut down the heater blower and stuff but not the fuel
pump, lights, computer.
If the alternator is the only problem, he got lucky.Â* I know of a guy in
Orlando thatÂ* water locked the engine on his 3 week old 50k Genesis.


I looked at a Genesis- not a bad car overall.

But couldn't bring myself to shell out $50 for a "luxury car" with a
Hyundai badge on the back...

--
Why does everyone keep referring to politicians as leaders? They are
public servants- and many are pretty damn poor ones at that.