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You Drove Through Standing Water. Here Is What to Do Next.

Water in the intake, milky oil, wet brakes and modules that fail weeks later. What to do in the first hour after driving through standing water in Broward.

Florida DrivingJune 13, 20266 min read

It happens fast in Broward. A summer cell parks over Fort Lauderdale for forty minutes, the drains back up, and a street you drive every day is suddenly a canal. You look at it, decide it is not that deep, and you go. Halfway through, the water is higher than you thought and the car is not happy.

What you do in the next hour decides whether this is an annoyance or a totaled vehicle. Read this now, before you need it.

If the Engine Stalled in the Water: Do Not Restart It

This is the single rule that saves engines. If your engine cut out while you were in the water, there is a real chance water was drawn into the air intake and is now sitting in a cylinder. Water does not compress. When the piston comes up on the compression stroke against a cylinder full of water, something has to give, and it is usually a connecting rod bending or breaking. That is hydrolock, and it turns a wet car into an engine replacement.

The engine may have stalled for a harmless reason. It may have stalled because it inhaled water. From the driver seat you cannot tell the difference, and the cost of guessing wrong is enormous. Do not crank it. Get the car towed and have it checked.

If the Engine Is Still Running

Keep moving to dry ground, then stop somewhere safe and shut it off. Do not park it and forget about it. Water that got in is still in.

Dry your brakes immediately

Wet brake rotors and pads do not grip properly, and the first stop after water can be alarmingly long. Once you are clear of the water and on a straight, empty stretch with nobody behind you, drive slowly and apply light, steady brake pressure for a few seconds while still rolling. The friction heats the rotors and drives the water off. Do this before you need the brakes for real.

The Checks That Actually Tell You Something

  1. 1Pull the engine oil dipstick and look at it in good light. Clean oil is amber to black and translucent on the stick. If it looks like a milkshake, tan and opaque and thickened, water is in the oil. Do not run the engine. Water in the oil destroys bearings quickly.
  2. 2Open the air filter housing. This is the most direct evidence you can get. If the filter element is soaked or shows a waterline, the engine was drawing air at or below the water level, and water almost certainly reached the intake tract.
  3. 3Look at the intake tube and the throttle body for water droplets or silt.
  4. 4Check the transmission fluid, if your vehicle has a dipstick for it. Milky or foamy fluid means water intrusion, and an automatic transmission with water in it does not survive being driven.
  5. 5Check the front and rear differential and transfer case fluids on trucks and rear-drive vehicles. Their vents are often low on the housing, and a hot axle plunged into cool water sucks water in as the air inside contracts. Milky gear oil is a common and easily missed flood casualty.
  6. 6Pull up a corner of the carpet in the footwells and check under the padding. The carpet on top can feel dry while the jute padding underneath is saturated.
  7. 7Look at the spare tire well under the trunk floor. It is the low point of the body and it collects water and silt when nowhere else shows anything.

Salt and Brackish Water Is a Different Category of Problem

This matters enormously here. Water backing up near the coast, along the Intracoastal, near Port Everglades or through the low streets around the New River is not clean rainwater. It is brackish, and it may be flat-out salt water on a surge event. Salt water is conductive and corrosive, and it does not stop working when the car dries.

Fresh rainwater in a footwell is a problem you can often dry out. Salt water in the same footwell is a problem that keeps eating wiring, connectors, seat rail bolts and floor pan metal for years. If your car went through salt or brackish water, it needs a far more aggressive response, including flushing and thorough drying, not just a wet vac and an open window.

The Electrical Damage That Shows Up in Three Weeks

This is what catches people out. The car drives home. Nothing seems wrong. Two or three weeks later the transmission starts shifting strangely, the dash lights up, a window stops working, or the car will not start on a Tuesday morning. That is corrosion working its way through connectors and control module circuit boards.

Modern vehicles have control modules in genuinely bad places for flooding: under seats, behind kick panels, low in the center console, inside the driver footwell. Water gets into a connector, the metal starts corroding, resistance climbs, and the fault appears weeks later as an intermittent that seems totally unrelated to the day you drove through the puddle. If you tell the shop about the water, a good diagnostician goes hunting for corroded grounds and pins first. If you do not mention it, everybody chases ghosts and you pay for it.

When It Is Safe to Drive and When to Call a Tow

Call a tow and get it inspected if any of these are true

  • The engine stalled while in the water, for any reason.
  • The oil is milky, or the air filter is wet.
  • Water reached the bottom of the doors or higher, meaning the interior and low-mounted modules got wet.
  • It was salt or brackish water above the bottom of the wheels.
  • The car cranks but will not start, or it runs rough, misfires or knocks.
  • Any warning light came on during or after the water.

You are probably okay, but still get it looked at, if

The water never got above the bottom of the wheel rims, the engine never stumbled, the air filter is dry, the oil looks normal and the interior is dry. Dry your brakes, keep an eye on it, and have the underbody, the fluids and the low connectors checked within the next few days. Silt trapped against a brake line or a wiring loom does damage long after the water has gone.

We Will Come Look at It Where It Sits

You should not have to drive a possibly flooded car anywhere to find out whether it is safe to drive. Mobile Mechanic Auto Repair comes to you, checks the air filter, the oil, the fluids and the low-mounted electronics on-site, and scans every module for the stored codes that flood damage leaves behind.

If your car went through water anywhere in Broward, from Hollywood to Pompano Beach to Plantation, call (754) 236-1714 before you turn the key again. It costs nothing to ask, and it can save the engine.

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