How to fix a leaking sunroof

PROFESSIONAL COST: $100

YOUR COST: $10

SAVINGS: $90

COMPLEXITY

Simple

TOOLS

Shop vacuum

MATERIALS

PVC trap adapter, to fit vacuum hose

PVC cap, to fit adapter

PVC barbed adapter, 3/8-in.

Vinyl hose, to fit barbed adapter

Speedometer cable

You’ve got water on your seats right below the sunroof, and you’re about to take matters into your own hands. We’re warning you: Put down the caulk gun and step away from the vehicle. Usually it’s simply a drain tube that’s clogged with debris. Then the water can’t drain and it overflows into the cabin. And that’s a simple DIY repair that you can do in about 20 minutes.

Open your sunroof and look for the drain holes in both front corners. Those tubes run through the door pillars and drain through to the rocker panels. You may be tempted to run a coat hanger down the tubes or blast them with compressed air. Don’t! You might poke the wire right through the tubing or disconnect it from the drain hole. Then you’d have to remove the entire headliner to reconnect it—a big job. Instead, use a shop vacuum and small-diameter vinyl tubing to suck out the clog (see Photo 1).

If that doesn’t do the trick, try running a very small flexible “plumbing” snake down the tube to break up the clog. (Actually, it’s a speedometer cable found at any auto parts store for about $8.)


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1. Make a hose reducer with ordinary PVC plumbing parts and attach a vinyl hose to the end. Then vacuum the crud out of the water channel and the drain tube.

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2. Snake out a really stubborn clog with a speedometer cable. Twist the cable as you feed it down the tube.

CAUTION: If cleaning the tubes doesn’t work, don’t try to disassemble the mechanism or bend the sheet metal to get a better fit. That’s a job for a top-notch body shop.