They say it all the time on the news and the SES bulletins, and I'll say it now - NEVER drive through floodwaters. You're lucky it wasn't worse!
Now - theres several reasons the car could have stopped in the first place.
1- water got into the ignition system (dizzy or ignition controller) and stopped the spark
2) water got into the fuel system which starts right at the airbox on a mk1 cabby with k-jet. this means that possibly by water entering the airbox the k-jet fuel metering system did some weird stuff.
3) water got sucked all the way into the engine, and you bent a rod or two.
First, I would be taking the airbox assembly out and letting it dry out well whilst also changing the oil and look very closely at the oil once you've drained it, specifically looking for volumes of water in the oil.
When you are sure that the ignition and k-jet parts are well dried out, try running it again. If you have bent a rod or two this might cause a big loss of power, maybe some engine imbalance whilst running as well. I'd be surprised if you could have sucked enough water in to bend a rod but you never know.
Its also possible that the ignition system is damaged from the water and it wont advance, which may be whats preventing the engine from revving up.
Good luck. Never drive though flood waters.
'07 Touareg V6 TDI with air suspension
'98 Mk3 Cabriolet 2.0 8V
'99 A4 Quattro 1.8T
Bookmarks