Bassman 1 Posted April 4, 2010 I have a pretty serious leak which settles under the rear seat and behind the drivers seat. I have read a lot of posts and it looks like a number of things, rear quarter seals, sunroof drains, boot seal, etc. Before I have a go (I am away at the moment so I am reading up on this in my spare time), are the sunroof drains accessible without removing the headlining? If not can you pull part of it away at the pillars without messing around scraping off glue as I have a feeling this will not be easy to do and I will be left with a scrap headlining! Thanks Rob Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Simes 248 2 Cars Posted April 6, 2010 Run a hose up against the passenger rear windows and watch it trickle in behind the trim and settle under the seats. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Bassman 1 Posted April 6, 2010 Run a hose up against the passenger rear windows and watch it trickle in behind the trim and settle under the seats. Yes that is what I am expecting, but I was hoping to check and clear all the sunroof drains as well, are they accessible without completely removing the headling? Thanks Rob Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Pugnut 9 1 Cars Posted April 6, 2010 Yes that is what I am expecting, but I was hoping to check and clear all the sunroof drains as well, are they accessible without completely removing the headling? Thanks Rob from just removing a sunroof headling, i found its not really glued at the sides. the hoses go straight inside the roof structure and down the pillars in all 4 corners anyway, so you wont see much. you should be able to remove trim round the edges of the roof and peel back the lining enough to see the hoses if you so desire Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Bassman 1 Posted April 6, 2010 from just removing a sunroof headling, i found its not really glued at the sides. the hoses go straight inside the roof structure and down the pillars in all 4 corners anyway, so you wont see much. you should be able to remove trim round the edges of the roof and peel back the lining enough to see the hoses if you so desire Thanks. I have seen photos where it appears the pipes have split near the roof so I wanted to have a gander, but chances are it is just my rear 1/4 windows, but if I am going to sort the leaks, I want to check the drains are all clear as well. Thanks Rob Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Bassman 1 Posted June 6, 2010 It was the rear quarter seal on the off side that was leaking. Had gone inside the door card as well so needed a bit of a clean up and a rust proof. Hopefully sorted it now. Thanks Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
muddatrucker 125 Posted June 8, 2010 I have this problem, what with 2nd hand seals being unreliable, is all purpose sealant an option? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
richsmells 2 Posted June 8, 2010 (edited) I sealed mine up with a smear of silicone in the groove. The problem is the rubber shrinks with age so it'll never seal perfectly. Someone on here suggested gently stretching the seals in a bucket of hot water to make them more pliable. I tried this and together with the silicone sealant my leak stopped. A couple of years later it was back though Edited June 8, 2010 by richsmells Share this post Link to post Share on other sites