Please Help..underhood cable damage
#18
One of my friends had the exact same thing happen to his 2001 Boxster. On this re-design Porsche must have moved the mouse magnet from under the shroud above the engine mounted oil cooler on the aircooled 911 to the cabin filter box.
#19
ltc- PM sent.
also, good stuff in your post, thank you very much! I am going to try that copper tape.
MJones- foil to keep the whiskered, beady eyed ones from nesting down in the cabin air intake plenum while I effect repairs :-) Didn't know anything else to use that the little bastards wouldn't eat or remove in the meantime.
Edgy- lol. Very funny! :-) Yes it is a first for me for rodent damage.
Adias- I, and my car, moved into a new house in March. It has a garage. My 997 lives in the garage. I drive my 997 2-3 days per week.
Will someone be kind enough to post a list of the various health maladies that may not be joked around with? Prostatitis? Aneurysm? Cauliflower ear? Gosh folks, no harm meant on this side. I just thought being eaten from the inside, as my car was, was analogous to the health condition of which we should not speak. No ill will or callousness intended.
Peace!
also, good stuff in your post, thank you very much! I am going to try that copper tape.
MJones- foil to keep the whiskered, beady eyed ones from nesting down in the cabin air intake plenum while I effect repairs :-) Didn't know anything else to use that the little bastards wouldn't eat or remove in the meantime.
Edgy- lol. Very funny! :-) Yes it is a first for me for rodent damage.
Adias- I, and my car, moved into a new house in March. It has a garage. My 997 lives in the garage. I drive my 997 2-3 days per week.
Will someone be kind enough to post a list of the various health maladies that may not be joked around with? Prostatitis? Aneurysm? Cauliflower ear? Gosh folks, no harm meant on this side. I just thought being eaten from the inside, as my car was, was analogous to the health condition of which we should not speak. No ill will or callousness intended.
Peace!
#20
I ordered the copper tape ltc was kind enough to link to, and explain use of, and am going to try that. Dealership advised today the antenna wire, by itself, is *not* listed as an available part. The harness however is...and it costs $8000.
My guess is that mouse nest was built some months ago, but with no outer clues, I had no idea until the NAV failure provoked me to dig around. It is all sealed under covers up there you know?
Been feeding my Cayenne (which co-habitates in the same garage as the 911) some dusty air the past month, so this AM I pulled the plastic beauty panels around the engine compartment off so as to access the air filters. While no nests, there *was* chew marks and insulation missing from a location on the firewall.
So I bought more traps at Wal-Mart today. This AM caught two mice in traps under the 911. If I can keep the killing pressure on, perhaps I can end the Porsche attack.
Will also contact a professional regarding a way to repel the critters outright. Hey, if mothballs work, that would be great!
My guess is that mouse nest was built some months ago, but with no outer clues, I had no idea until the NAV failure provoked me to dig around. It is all sealed under covers up there you know?
Been feeding my Cayenne (which co-habitates in the same garage as the 911) some dusty air the past month, so this AM I pulled the plastic beauty panels around the engine compartment off so as to access the air filters. While no nests, there *was* chew marks and insulation missing from a location on the firewall.
So I bought more traps at Wal-Mart today. This AM caught two mice in traps under the 911. If I can keep the killing pressure on, perhaps I can end the Porsche attack.
Will also contact a professional regarding a way to repel the critters outright. Hey, if mothballs work, that would be great!
#21
try 997.612.030.75 - connecting line antenna control part. That is the connecting line between GPS antenna and PCM. It's not part of any wiring harness nor is there any other line between GPS antenna and PCM.
#22
Ok, repair completed per LTC suggestion. (memo997- just saw your post, so will hold idea in reserve if needed, thank you!!).
Used the copper tape wrap. Verdict- success. Many thanks for a high-tech repair suggestion.
**Important Secret Discovery** you all will want to consider.
During the repair/cleaning process I removed the cabin air filter, and the plastic tray it mounts in. There is a rubber gasket that seals this tray to the air plenum entering the car passenger compartment. This gasket was folded over on itself, allowing incoming air to to bypass the $100, carbon impregnated cabin air filter.
It was incorrectly installed at the factory. No doubt after after a multi-German beer lunch, as I hear they enjoy over there. See the exploded diagram attached. The gasket is part "3" on the diagram, passenger side.
If you have reason to believe you may have the same problem (air in cabin does not seem to be filtered), you might want to check this gasket.
In any event, everything is finally back together and the NAV once again knows where it is. *Whew* A distasteful, but valuable learning experience!
Used the copper tape wrap. Verdict- success. Many thanks for a high-tech repair suggestion.
**Important Secret Discovery** you all will want to consider.
During the repair/cleaning process I removed the cabin air filter, and the plastic tray it mounts in. There is a rubber gasket that seals this tray to the air plenum entering the car passenger compartment. This gasket was folded over on itself, allowing incoming air to to bypass the $100, carbon impregnated cabin air filter.
It was incorrectly installed at the factory. No doubt after after a multi-German beer lunch, as I hear they enjoy over there. See the exploded diagram attached. The gasket is part "3" on the diagram, passenger side.
If you have reason to believe you may have the same problem (air in cabin does not seem to be filtered), you might want to check this gasket.
In any event, everything is finally back together and the NAV once again knows where it is. *Whew* A distasteful, but valuable learning experience!
#23
Ok, repair completed per LTC suggestion. (memo997- just saw your post, so will hold idea in reserve if needed, thank you!!).
Used the copper tape wrap. Verdict- success. Many thanks for a high-tech repair suggestion.
**Important Secret Discovery** you all will want to consider.
During the repair/cleaning process I removed the cabin air filter, and the plastic tray it mounts in. There is a rubber gasket that seals this tray to the air plenum entering the car passenger compartment. This gasket was folded over on itself, allowing incoming air to to bypass the $100, carbon impregnated cabin air filter.
It was incorrectly installed at the factory. No doubt after after a multi-German beer lunch, as I hear they enjoy over there. See the exploded diagram attached. The gasket is part "3" on the diagram, passenger side.
If you have reason to believe you may have the same problem (air in cabin does not seem to be filtered), you might want to check this gasket.
In any event, everything is finally back together and the NAV once again knows where it is. *Whew* A distasteful, but valuable learning experience!
Used the copper tape wrap. Verdict- success. Many thanks for a high-tech repair suggestion.
**Important Secret Discovery** you all will want to consider.
During the repair/cleaning process I removed the cabin air filter, and the plastic tray it mounts in. There is a rubber gasket that seals this tray to the air plenum entering the car passenger compartment. This gasket was folded over on itself, allowing incoming air to to bypass the $100, carbon impregnated cabin air filter.
It was incorrectly installed at the factory. No doubt after after a multi-German beer lunch, as I hear they enjoy over there. See the exploded diagram attached. The gasket is part "3" on the diagram, passenger side.
If you have reason to believe you may have the same problem (air in cabin does not seem to be filtered), you might want to check this gasket.
In any event, everything is finally back together and the NAV once again knows where it is. *Whew* A distasteful, but valuable learning experience!
#24
... **Important Secret Discovery** you all will want to consider.
During the repair/cleaning process I removed the cabin air filter, and the plastic tray it mounts in. There is a rubber gasket that seals this tray to the air plenum entering the car passenger compartment. This gasket was folded over on itself, allowing incoming air to to bypass the $100, carbon impregnated cabin air filter.
It was incorrectly installed at the factory. No doubt after after a multi-German beer lunch, as I hear they enjoy over there. See the exploded diagram attached. The gasket is part "3" on the diagram, passenger side.
If you have reason to believe you may have the same problem (air in cabin does not seem to be filtered), you might want to check this gasket.
During the repair/cleaning process I removed the cabin air filter, and the plastic tray it mounts in. There is a rubber gasket that seals this tray to the air plenum entering the car passenger compartment. This gasket was folded over on itself, allowing incoming air to to bypass the $100, carbon impregnated cabin air filter.
It was incorrectly installed at the factory. No doubt after after a multi-German beer lunch, as I hear they enjoy over there. See the exploded diagram attached. The gasket is part "3" on the diagram, passenger side.
If you have reason to believe you may have the same problem (air in cabin does not seem to be filtered), you might want to check this gasket.
Re the cabin air filter gasket... is that gasket readily visible when the cabin air filter is changed? or did you have to dig deeper to find it?
#25
It is possible, with the filter removed, if you very carefully examine the area between the plastic tray and firewall, you might be able to determine if it is not installed correctly. You would see this black, foam rubber gasket to be intruding into the plenum area or even perhaps affecting the action of the air recirculation control flap, which is right at the same spot.
Hot tip: I think you could get the cabin air filter removed w/o removing the cowling, but you should remove the thin, flexible metal bracket ("25" in exploded view) that helps secure the black plastic cowling to the firewall area. Only four screws that you can use a hex wrench to loosen/remove (or maybe a Torx too). Remove bottom two screws, only loosen top two.
The bracket if not removed blocks removal of the cabin air filter.
The tray itself is secured by three phillips screws. You will need to detach the two hood supports temporarily and raise the hood back to get access to the screw most toward the passenger side. Or have a very exact length screwdriver.
The metal clips that secure the ball ends to the hood supports pop right in/out so no big deal to do all this.
Probably worthwhile to check and it is not terribly hard to get to.
#26
BUT
I carry high deductibles as I personally believe in saving insurance for catastrophes. For the great majority of people it works out far better financially in the long run to do this. And keeps me insurable and from getting my rates jacked. My rates with State Farm are miniscule considering the value of the property insured.
All in all I only wound up spending ~$100 on an OE carbon cabin air filter, and then ~$75 for the tray/gasket. Oh- and $12 for the copper tape. So just not worth the hassle and potential future ramifications to file an insurance claim.
I did all the work myself (easy, and I learned about my car).
If the harness needed replacing, then of course insurance would have picked up the tab, for sure. That would have been $$$$$ to repair. And I would have been very sad
But everything worked out ok.
#28
For sure.
BUT
I carry high deductibles as I personally believe in saving insurance for catastrophes. For the great majority of people it works out far better financially in the long run to do this. And keeps me insurable and from getting my rates jacked. My rates with State Farm are miniscule considering the value of the property insured.
All in all I only wound up spending ~$100 on an OE carbon cabin air filter, and then ~$75 for the tray/gasket. Oh- and $12 for the copper tape. So just not worth the hassle and potential future ramifications to file an insurance claim.
I did all the work myself (easy, and I learned about my car).
If the harness needed replacing, then of course insurance would have picked up the tab, for sure. That would have been $$$$$ to repair. And I would have been very sad
But everything worked out ok.
BUT
I carry high deductibles as I personally believe in saving insurance for catastrophes. For the great majority of people it works out far better financially in the long run to do this. And keeps me insurable and from getting my rates jacked. My rates with State Farm are miniscule considering the value of the property insured.
All in all I only wound up spending ~$100 on an OE carbon cabin air filter, and then ~$75 for the tray/gasket. Oh- and $12 for the copper tape. So just not worth the hassle and potential future ramifications to file an insurance claim.
I did all the work myself (easy, and I learned about my car).
If the harness needed replacing, then of course insurance would have picked up the tab, for sure. That would have been $$$$$ to repair. And I would have been very sad
But everything worked out ok.
#29
Mice feeding on electrical wires
Driving over the week end, the check engine warning appeared followed by "failure of engine compartment blower" both coupled with a total lack of power above 4000 RPM; I had the car checked by the dealer to discover that mice had been partying on the electrical wires which necessitated engine removal to access and replace all bitten wires! mice have some eclectic taste around!
#30
you really freaked me out with this guys, I think I saw mice other day in my garage, got car out and inspected all I could in the frunk and engine compartments, seems like no damage but hell, if it is a war of mice against p-cars, I better double check... mouse traps are due now.