The problem: Occasionally I would find the floor mat wet on the passenger front footwell of 2001 V70. Initially I checked the carpet under the rubber mat and found the carpet felt dry. I made the wrong assumption that the rubber mat was catching the drip as it fell from somewhere under the dash.
Later I read posts here and learned that the carpet has a thick foam pad and the carpet itself would not generally feel wet when you feel the top. However, the foam pad underneath can be soaked.
Other posts talk about plugged sun roof drains that cause leaks to driver and passenger side footwells.
Look here viewtopic.php?f=9&t=71407&p=473882&hili ... an#p473882
for posts on checking the sun roof drains for plugging and leaks. When I checked my sunroof drain tubes, they were ok and drained to the ground.
I searched deeper into the problem to try to find the source of the water. Look here: viewtopic.php?f=9&t=79080&p=425794&hili ... et#p425794 to see how to remove the front carpet. Note the comment to try not removing the sill plates. I missed that note and had to get new attachment clips.
I found my front passenger side carpet was wet in one area. See photo of removed passenger front carpet and pad.
Back side of the carpet showing the foam pad.
The back passenger carpet pad was not wet.
I looked under the passenger side dash and found the two tubes for water drains. One is from the blower motor housing and the other is for the cabin air filter. They both tee together and then go to outside drain.
Moving on to other potential leak points, I removed the cowl cover
See viewtopic.php?f=9&t=76919&p=410806&hili ... ve#p410792 for instructions to remove the cowl cover. With the cowl cover removed, I found dirt and trash in both corners. See photo of debris.
The red circle indicates the drain fitting. The plastic drain fitting has 4 drain holes flush with the metal floor of the cowl.
I poured water into the drain holes at the front edge and confirmed water runs to the ground and not into the cabin. I cleaned out the debris on both sides. Then I poured water into the drains on both sides to confirm they drain to the ground. I confirmed that the cabin floor was not getting wet.
I replaced the cowl cover and poured water on the windshield above the cowl cover while checking the cabin for water. I had noted the seal at the bottom of the windshield to the top edge of the cowl cover did not look to be water tight. It is a hard plastic Z shape with aluminum internal stiffener.
It did not have any adhesive or rubber material that would stop water from flowing around the edge and into the cowl blower inlet. Perhaps it originally had adhesive, but my windshield has been replaced. After several quarts of water poured on the windshield I found a small trickle of water into the cabin. The water was coming from somewhere behind the blower that I could not see. I removed the cowl cover and confirmed there was water inside the blower housing.
I puzzled over how water was getting behind the blower housing if the cowl drain and the blower housing drains were clear. I checked inside the air inlet duct with a mirror. There was a crumbling foam seal above the blower housing and below the cowl.
This was likely the way water was getting to behind the blower housing. I removed the air inlet duct and confirmed there is a raised metal lip that prevents water from the cowl floor getting into the blower housing unless water level gets about 0.5 inch deep. With the cowl drains clean this should never happen. If you want to remove the air inlet duct, there are six clips on the duct. Carefully pry the clips inward and lift the duct up from the bottom of the cowl.
I was fairly sure the foam seal was causing the leak and decided a cover for the air inlet duct would solve the problem. In fact, there are posts that describe a cover used on later Volvos to prevent this leak into the blower housing. I decided to make my own rain deflecting cover. Since I have metal forming experience and not plastic forming experience, I chose aluminum sheet to make my rain cover.
First step was taking some basic measurements to find the cover dimensions. Then I made a rough cardboard shape in the size needed and taped the corners where the cardboard folded. It fit ok, but needed to be deeper to assure the drops on the rear, left corner ran forward and off the front edge. A second, more refined cardboard model was made. See photo of cardboard model outside of cowl.
See photo of model inside the cowl.
This model looked good. Next step was to make the aluminum cover. I used 0.063 thickness aluminum sheet (purchased from Summit Racing online). See photo of pattern layout on aluminum sheet.
After cutting out the aluminum shape it looked like this.
I bent the sheet by clamping over a steel plate edge and using a hammer. Not good enough for public view, but it worked. Here is the completed cover out of car.
Bonus points if you identify my photo table. Cover installed in cowl opening.
I tested the cover with a couple gallons of water on the windshield. Worked good so far. No water inside the cabin on the floor. It will rain in a few days for the real test.
Rain came and still the cabin floor is dry. I used four dabs of Goop Marine adhesive (one on each corner) to hold the cover in place.
See photo.
If you want to make your own cover, here is a photo of the cardboard pattern with dimensions.
Reply to this post if you have questions.
volvolugnut
P2 passenger footwell leak solution with photos
- volvolugnut
- Posts: 6233
- Joined: 19 January 2014
- Year and Model: 2001 V70
- Location: Oklahoma USA
- Has thanked: 927 times
- Been thanked: 1000 times
P2 passenger footwell leak solution with photos
The Fleet:
Volvo: 2001 V70 T5, 1986 244DL, 1983 245DL, 1975 245DL, 1959 PV544, multiple Volvo parts cars.
Mercedes: 2001 E320, 1973 280, 1974 280C, 1989 300E, 1988 300TE, 1979 300TD, parts cars.
2009 Smart Passion
Ford: 1977 F350, 1964 F150 (2), 1938 Tudor Sedan
Farmall tractors: 1956 400 Diesel, 1946 A
And others.
Volvo: 2001 V70 T5, 1986 244DL, 1983 245DL, 1975 245DL, 1959 PV544, multiple Volvo parts cars.
Mercedes: 2001 E320, 1973 280, 1974 280C, 1989 300E, 1988 300TE, 1979 300TD, parts cars.
2009 Smart Passion
Ford: 1977 F350, 1964 F150 (2), 1938 Tudor Sedan
Farmall tractors: 1956 400 Diesel, 1946 A
And others.
-
karlosUKV70
- Posts: 1
- Joined: 29 January 2025
- Year and Model: 07 v70
- Location: Derby
- Has thanked: 1 time
Was there any movement on this? Mine only leaks when I park on an incline in the rain
- br0dy519
- Posts: 746
- Joined: 17 December 2019
- Year and Model: 2004 XC70
- Location: Windsor, ON
- Has thanked: 126 times
- Been thanked: 116 times
The dead image links don't help. But for what it's worth, I chased a leak like this for weeks and it ended up being a bad bead of seal on a windshield replacement.
04s60 2.4
04xc70 2.5t
04xc70 2.5t
prwood wrote:I wish I had a permanent car repair area that was covered, had a level surface, lighting and fans, a workbench, and tool cabinets. You know,like a garage. Much of my time during the job is spent hauling things up and down the stairs to the basement or in and out of the storage shed, or running back downstairs when I realize I need something else,or taking a break from standing out in the sun,or using flashlights or work lamps when it gets dark.
- volvolugnut
- Posts: 6233
- Joined: 19 January 2014
- Year and Model: 2001 V70
- Location: Oklahoma USA
- Has thanked: 927 times
- Been thanked: 1000 times
Update January 29, 2025:
I have not had a wet carpet problem since I made this addition.
I still park in the same places and the car is always parked outside.
volvolugnut
I have not had a wet carpet problem since I made this addition.
I still park in the same places and the car is always parked outside.
volvolugnut
The Fleet:
Volvo: 2001 V70 T5, 1986 244DL, 1983 245DL, 1975 245DL, 1959 PV544, multiple Volvo parts cars.
Mercedes: 2001 E320, 1973 280, 1974 280C, 1989 300E, 1988 300TE, 1979 300TD, parts cars.
2009 Smart Passion
Ford: 1977 F350, 1964 F150 (2), 1938 Tudor Sedan
Farmall tractors: 1956 400 Diesel, 1946 A
And others.
Volvo: 2001 V70 T5, 1986 244DL, 1983 245DL, 1975 245DL, 1959 PV544, multiple Volvo parts cars.
Mercedes: 2001 E320, 1973 280, 1974 280C, 1989 300E, 1988 300TE, 1979 300TD, parts cars.
2009 Smart Passion
Ford: 1977 F350, 1964 F150 (2), 1938 Tudor Sedan
Farmall tractors: 1956 400 Diesel, 1946 A
And others.
- DavidE7
- Posts: 134
- Joined: 4 March 2022
- Year and Model: 01-07 V70, S60, XC70
- Location: Detroit, Michigan
- Has thanked: 53 times
- Been thanked: 62 times
I had a similar problem after replacing a Volvo windshield with an aftermarket windshield that had slightly thinner glass than the original glass. The Z shaped trim at the bottom of the windshield didn't fit tightly and allowed water to drip down into the blower fan. I bent the aluminium channel tighter and glued it to the glass with clear silicone adhesive to fix the leak. Making a cover for the opening sounds like a more permanent solution!
David E
2001 Moondust V70 2.4 293,000 miles
2001 Nautic Blue V70 2.4 224,000 miles
2004 Nautic Blue XC70 2.5T 251,000 miles
new: 2004 Black Saphire V70R 193,000 miles
2007 Titanium S60 2.5T 275,000 miles
2007 Magic Blue S60 2.5T 233,000 miles
2007 Silver V70 2.4 200,000 miles
P2 Volvos for every person in my family
2001 Moondust V70 2.4 293,000 miles
2001 Nautic Blue V70 2.4 224,000 miles
2004 Nautic Blue XC70 2.5T 251,000 miles
new: 2004 Black Saphire V70R 193,000 miles
2007 Titanium S60 2.5T 275,000 miles
2007 Magic Blue S60 2.5T 233,000 miles
2007 Silver V70 2.4 200,000 miles
P2 Volvos for every person in my family
-
dikidera
- Posts: 1305
- Joined: 15 August 2022
- Year and Model: S60 2005
- Location: Galaxy far far away
- Has thanked: 67 times
- Been thanked: 175 times
Would you be willing to reupload the images?volvolugnut wrote: ↑29 Jan 2025, 13:01 Update January 29, 2025:
I have not had a wet carpet problem since I made this addition.
I still park in the same places and the car is always parked outside.
volvolugnut
- volvolugnut
- Posts: 6233
- Joined: 19 January 2014
- Year and Model: 2001 V70
- Location: Oklahoma USA
- Has thanked: 927 times
- Been thanked: 1000 times
Are the photos no longer available? These were uploaded to MVS server. I just looked at them in this post.
volvolugnut
volvolugnut
The Fleet:
Volvo: 2001 V70 T5, 1986 244DL, 1983 245DL, 1975 245DL, 1959 PV544, multiple Volvo parts cars.
Mercedes: 2001 E320, 1973 280, 1974 280C, 1989 300E, 1988 300TE, 1979 300TD, parts cars.
2009 Smart Passion
Ford: 1977 F350, 1964 F150 (2), 1938 Tudor Sedan
Farmall tractors: 1956 400 Diesel, 1946 A
And others.
Volvo: 2001 V70 T5, 1986 244DL, 1983 245DL, 1975 245DL, 1959 PV544, multiple Volvo parts cars.
Mercedes: 2001 E320, 1973 280, 1974 280C, 1989 300E, 1988 300TE, 1979 300TD, parts cars.
2009 Smart Passion
Ford: 1977 F350, 1964 F150 (2), 1938 Tudor Sedan
Farmall tractors: 1956 400 Diesel, 1946 A
And others.
- volvolugnut
- Posts: 6233
- Joined: 19 January 2014
- Year and Model: 2001 V70
- Location: Oklahoma USA
- Has thanked: 927 times
- Been thanked: 1000 times
Are you signed in? Have you refreshed? Can you see other photos?
There are a lot of photos and may take a while to load.
Matt may have to fix something.
volvolugnut
There are a lot of photos and may take a while to load.
Matt may have to fix something.
volvolugnut
The Fleet:
Volvo: 2001 V70 T5, 1986 244DL, 1983 245DL, 1975 245DL, 1959 PV544, multiple Volvo parts cars.
Mercedes: 2001 E320, 1973 280, 1974 280C, 1989 300E, 1988 300TE, 1979 300TD, parts cars.
2009 Smart Passion
Ford: 1977 F350, 1964 F150 (2), 1938 Tudor Sedan
Farmall tractors: 1956 400 Diesel, 1946 A
And others.
Volvo: 2001 V70 T5, 1986 244DL, 1983 245DL, 1975 245DL, 1959 PV544, multiple Volvo parts cars.
Mercedes: 2001 E320, 1973 280, 1974 280C, 1989 300E, 1988 300TE, 1979 300TD, parts cars.
2009 Smart Passion
Ford: 1977 F350, 1964 F150 (2), 1938 Tudor Sedan
Farmall tractors: 1956 400 Diesel, 1946 A
And others.
- Krons
- Posts: 1073
- Joined: 9 January 2022
- Year and Model: 08S60 05XC90 02S60
- Location: Des Moines, IA
- Has thanked: 193 times
- Been thanked: 202 times
I see this, reloaded a few times.
08 S602.5T/05 XC902.5T/02 S602.4T
08 C702.5T (sold)
05 S402.4i (RIP, timing belt failure)
The non-Swedes:
25 Mazda MX-5 / 17 Frontier Pro-4X / 17 Ford Focus
17 R1200GS / 15 Versys 1000 / 11 DR-Z400S / 07 R1200GSA
08 C702.5T (sold)
05 S402.4i (RIP, timing belt failure)
The non-Swedes:
25 Mazda MX-5 / 17 Frontier Pro-4X / 17 Ford Focus
17 R1200GS / 15 Versys 1000 / 11 DR-Z400S / 07 R1200GSA
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post






