Bentley GT - Scuttle full of water - anyone else had this?
Discussion
Hi,
Unfortunately the search facility is down so can’t see if this has been covered before.
My Bro in law has a Bentley GT which stopped working a couple of weeks back due to a flat battery. He was advised to get the battery changed, which he did do, but it didn’t cure the problem.
Long story short, he was told the scuttle had flooded and that this in turn had caused a short circuit and damaged the wiring loom.
Having been advised by Bentley to make an insurance claim for flood damage, he has done so, had the car uplifted to the dealer and was awaiting an assessor to review the case.
Now, here's where the water gets a bit muddy. When the assessor was assessing, the mechanic mentioned that this is a known problem and they have designed a 'splicing kit' (whatever that may be!) to stop this happening. For whatever reason, this hasn’t been fitted to my B-i-L's car and as the loom is deemed to be a non-serviceable item (should last a lifetime) the insurance has said its Bentley problem to fix, and has closed the claim.
Has anyone else suffered from this? If so, how did you resolve it?
The car is (I’m guessing here) only around 5 years old and does have a full Bentley history, to my knowledge.
Any advice/experiences would be if interest.
Thanks in advance
Woody
Unfortunately the search facility is down so can’t see if this has been covered before.
My Bro in law has a Bentley GT which stopped working a couple of weeks back due to a flat battery. He was advised to get the battery changed, which he did do, but it didn’t cure the problem.
Long story short, he was told the scuttle had flooded and that this in turn had caused a short circuit and damaged the wiring loom.
Having been advised by Bentley to make an insurance claim for flood damage, he has done so, had the car uplifted to the dealer and was awaiting an assessor to review the case.
Now, here's where the water gets a bit muddy. When the assessor was assessing, the mechanic mentioned that this is a known problem and they have designed a 'splicing kit' (whatever that may be!) to stop this happening. For whatever reason, this hasn’t been fitted to my B-i-L's car and as the loom is deemed to be a non-serviceable item (should last a lifetime) the insurance has said its Bentley problem to fix, and has closed the claim.
Has anyone else suffered from this? If so, how did you resolve it?
The car is (I’m guessing here) only around 5 years old and does have a full Bentley history, to my knowledge.
Any advice/experiences would be if interest.
Thanks in advance
Woody
Pork said:
Hi,
Unfortunately the search facility is down so can’t see if this has been covered before.
My Bro in law has a Bentley GT which stopped working a couple of weeks back due to a flat battery. He was advised to get the battery changed, which he did do, but it didn’t cure the problem.
Long story short, he was told the scuttle had flooded and that this in turn had caused a short circuit and damaged the wiring loom.
Having been advised by Bentley to make an insurance claim for flood damage, he has done so, had the car uplifted to the dealer and was awaiting an assessor to review the case.
Now, here's where the water gets a bit muddy. When the assessor was assessing, the mechanic mentioned that this is a known problem and they have designed a 'splicing kit' (whatever that may be!) to stop this happening. For whatever reason, this hasn’t been fitted to my B-i-L's car and as the loom is deemed to be a non-serviceable item (should last a lifetime) the insurance has said its Bentley problem to fix, and has closed the claim.
Has anyone else suffered from this? If so, how did you resolve it?
The car is (I’m guessing here) only around 5 years old and does have a full Bentley history, to my knowledge.
Any advice/experiences would be if interest.
Thanks in advance
Woody
Unfortantley quite common on early carsUnfortunately the search facility is down so can’t see if this has been covered before.
My Bro in law has a Bentley GT which stopped working a couple of weeks back due to a flat battery. He was advised to get the battery changed, which he did do, but it didn’t cure the problem.
Long story short, he was told the scuttle had flooded and that this in turn had caused a short circuit and damaged the wiring loom.
Having been advised by Bentley to make an insurance claim for flood damage, he has done so, had the car uplifted to the dealer and was awaiting an assessor to review the case.
Now, here's where the water gets a bit muddy. When the assessor was assessing, the mechanic mentioned that this is a known problem and they have designed a 'splicing kit' (whatever that may be!) to stop this happening. For whatever reason, this hasn’t been fitted to my B-i-L's car and as the loom is deemed to be a non-serviceable item (should last a lifetime) the insurance has said its Bentley problem to fix, and has closed the claim.
Has anyone else suffered from this? If so, how did you resolve it?
The car is (I’m guessing here) only around 5 years old and does have a full Bentley history, to my knowledge.
Any advice/experiences would be if interest.
Thanks in advance
Woody
elms said:
Unfortantley quite common on early cars
Hi Dion,Thanks for the reply. I understand this is quite common, but in your experience, whats the resolution? Is it for Bentley to sort(IMO, yes, they should - design fault which has had a 'fix' designed for it) or should my B-i-L brace himself for a £10-20k bill?
Thanks again.
This is a very common issue with GTs the problem relates to a water drain hole not being blown out with an airline at service time. The remedy is to keep the water drain cleared yet its position is above the gear box and awkward to get to and see, check on a regular basis the there is no water ingress in to the area by looking under the black plastic cover on the passinger side. When this area is open if there is water in this area suck it out with a wet&dry Hoover and regularly spray water repellant in to this area to protect the wiring and ECUs that are located here.
Do not be tempted to drill a hole in to the bottom as it will only let the water seep in to the passenger foot well.
Do not be tempted to drill a hole in to the bottom as it will only let the water seep in to the passenger foot well.
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