too much petrol in the cylinder not being burnt
You are. Don't drive through a flood. A car engine was not intended to be submerged in water, particularly dirty flood water.
Driving through flood water would cause the ignition to fail and stall the engine.
when you want to break it
yes you can
Engine, not motor, and that depends on your insurance policy. If you don't have flood insurance specifically, flood damage is typically not covered.
if you press the pedal to much that is what can cause the engine to flood
it wont work, you should know that.
A faulty engine temp sensor can do that.
Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends - 1984 Toby and the Flood 5-10 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G
u need to flush engineuse right viscocity oilfrom flood water in engine you have some debri left in engine that is not allowing lifters to seat properlyprobably still have some water in lifters
An engine will flood if there's too much fuel going in because of a stuck choke, a bad spark not igniting the fuel, failed temperature sensors, bad fuel regulator, timing...the list goes on.
The injectors in them are known to drip after you turn off the engine, after its been running for a short period. Pull the fuel pump relay, crank the engine for a bit and it should clear the flood. Or buy new injectors.