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Well gang, here's a topic that's been beat to death...but let's give it another swing shall we?

I saw an old forum thread where a guy put a Halloween fog machine in his car and with all the windows up, turned it on which showed all the air leaks in the cabin.  Specifically, he did it to find where exhaust was sneaking into the cabin when driving with the windows were down.

I gave that a shot this evening and found that it is my taillight gaskets, but the strange thing is they are brand new from Motorsport.  We even removed the black trim surrounds and bolted them back to the body and you can see the smoke sneaking around the gasket edges regardless of how tight we make the bolts holding the gasket to the body.

The gaskets are reasonably squishy (I have no idea how gummy these are supposed to be but they are very pliable).  I did notice that the plastic housing has raised bumps where the mounting bolts come through which would mean the gasket wouldn't be laying flush in the areas between these bolt bumps, right?  Was I supposed to install these with gasket maker between the rubber gasket and housing?

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Edited by chaseincats
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Featured Replies

Well thins might explain why I still have exhaust gasses in my cabin even after replacing bother seals. I think using silicone is a good idea and I don’t care what the next owner has to do since I plan on never removing them again. [emoji23]

1 hour ago, Av8ferg said:

Well thins might explain why I still have exhaust gasses in my cabin even after replacing bother seals. I think using silicone is a good idea and I don’t care what the next owner has to do since I plan on never removing them again. emoji23.png

 

18 hours ago, Jeff G 78 said:

3M trim adhesive *should* come off the body in the future.  It's sticky and gooey, but it does come off.  Besides, who cares about the next guy?  🙂 Seriously though, I'd rather have a sealed panel than worry about what might happen to somebody else in the future if they try to remove the lights.

That "next" person to have to deal with it could be you, whether it is the car you have today or another one down the road.  It's always nice to think of the future when doing things.


On 5/4/2023 at 3:20 PM, chaseincats said:

Would windshield sealer work do you all think?

I'm not sure I would use that. The intent of the seal-n-peel is that it designed to take up volume, but NOT stick. It's intended to peel off (easily without damage) at the end of the heating/cooling season. 

8 hours ago, heyitsrama said:

Might be able to use the gooey door plastic `3m 08578` that is used to get the plastic liners behind the door-cards to stick...

 

I should do this on my car, i was feeling loopy the other night driving around.

I was wondering when someone was going to mention that stuff.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07CTQ67X9

4 hours ago, chaseincats said:

I ended up going with the yellow trim adhesive since that binds to plastic, rubber, and metal since we're gluing the plastic housing to the rubber gasket and the rubber gasket to the vehicle's metal body.

Did you re-smoke it yet?  Let us know how it works out.

4 hours ago, Jeff G 78 said:

Did you re-smoke it yet?  Let us know how it works out.

The adhesive is drying on the housing to gasket side since last night.  I’ll put the adhesive on the gasket to car side tonight or tomorrow and report back

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