That depends on how deep the water is. If it is only up to the bottom of your bumper your ok, If its any higher than your headlights stay well clear. You will have electical faults and possibly get water in your engine.
Possible internal engine damage.
Yep.That is why you should go slow through a flooded road so it doesn't get in your engine. Hope this helps :)
That will depend on the design of the truck's engine, the condition of theroad surface, the weather, the amount of traffic encountered, the driver'sstyle of driving and the weight of his foot, and on how heavily the truck'scargo bed is loaded.That will depend on the design of the truck's engine, the condition of theroad surface, the weather, the amount of traffic encountered, the driver'sstyle of driving and the weight of his foot, and on how heavily the truck'scargo bed is loaded.That will depend on the design of the truck's engine, the condition of theroad surface, the weather, the amount of traffic encountered, the driver'sstyle of driving and the weight of his foot, and on how heavily the truck'scargo bed is loaded.That will depend on the design of the truck's engine, the condition of theroad surface, the weather, the amount of traffic encountered, the driver'sstyle of driving and the weight of his foot, and on how heavily the truck'scargo bed is loaded.
the engine is flooded with gas
I have one with the 3.8 engine. I get about 15-16 mpg. Mostly city /urban driving, heavily loaded with tools and parts.
BE CAREFUL! Does the engine crank? ** IF it doesn't, the air intake may have sucked up water and locked the compression cylinders hydrolically. IF it doesn't crank, pull the plugs out and try to crank the engine so that it pumps out the water. Replace the plugs and try to start again.** **IF it does, it just may need to dry out.**
An ATV's engine can get flooded if you hold the throttle open for too long. At the bottom of the carburetor, there is a screw that can be opened to drain it.
You are. Don't drive through a flood. A car engine was not intended to be submerged in water, particularly dirty flood water.
you can try getting the engine blowed out, but that may not solve it if it has sat a long period of time.
you flooded it
Driving through flood water would cause the ignition to fail and stall the engine.
maybe one of the electrical outlets in the engine got electricuted which made the engine not start.