Mk 2 Leon, How to Seal the Bonnet Strip

TimSawf

Active Member
Jun 26, 2011
865
3
South Manchester
This is a very straight forward procedure and requires no special skills

Tools required :
T-25 Torque bit
Pliers
Scissors / Knife
Cleaning materials

The Bonnet Strip is held in place by torque screws along the back and plastic clips along the front. Once the bonnet insulation is removed, you can see the underside of the clips. Just press the 2 legs together and push it through the hole. The 2 end clips can be awkward as they are behind the hinge plate. I used a pair of decorating scissors (long thin blades) to compress the 2 legs. The clip can easily be turned if it’s not in the right position to compress.

A2A.jpg


For those who haven’t yet removed the Bonnet Strip, this is a cross section (not to scale) of what it’s like underneath. There is a 13-14mm gap between the Bonnet Strip and the recess in the bonnet. The Bonnet Strip is quite thin and flexible, any sealing strip has to be compressed enough to make a good seal but not ask the Bonnet Strip to apply too much pressure or it will bow in between the clips. This will leave it proud of the bonnet, look bad, but worse still, air could get under it at speed and rip it off.

I did try putting a foam rubber strip as far forward as possible where the gap between the bonnet recess and Bonnet Strip was at its’ narrowest. Unfortunately, this meant putting the seal on the slope where the bonnet recesses. It did seal it but after a few days, it started leaking. When I took it off, the downward pressure from the Bonnet Strip had dislodged the seal. I moved the seal back where it would be on a flat surface so any pressure would be directly downwards and shouldn’t dislodge. This meant sealing a gap of 13-14mm and leaving more area in front of the seal where water could collect.

P1010027.jpg


The seals I chose (both self-adhesive) were a 10mm wide x 5mm thick closed cell foam rubber strip and a 12mm wide x 10mm thick hollow ‘D’ profile ‘bumper’ seal. The bumper seal is very soft, requires very little pressure to compress it and forms a very good waterproof seal. As you can see from the photo, that is 15mm compressed down to 13mm and the seal is more than sufficient to withstand vertical standing water. These materials are readily available on the internet and, depending on the quantity you buy, should cost between £12-15.

P1010028.jpg


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Ensure the surfaces are clean and free from any grease. I placed the 5mm seal in the bonnet recess between the fixing holes for the clips and the slope. There is only just enough room for a 10mm wide seal. I placed the bumper seal on the underside of the bonnet strip up against the raised section for the clips. This position should enable the seals to be in the correct position to form a watertight seal. There is also a drain hole in the centre of the bonnet recess just where the 5mm strip is fitted. This should be sealed.

Image0016.jpg


Water can also get in at either corner at the back of the Bonnet Strip. There is a cut out in the lip near the wiper spindle. Water tests on the windscreen showed water does get in here as well.

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As you can see, it is a little awkward to fit a seal across the back as the fixings get in the way. The gap is again 13-14mm so the same seal will suffice. I found it easier to fit both seals to the underside of the Bonnet Strip, 5mm seal on the Strip and the bumper seal on the 5mm seal. It needs to be right up against the fixings (as far forward as possible) as the bonnet recess does not go back as far as the Bonnet Strip.

When re-fitting the Bonnet Strip, it is advisable to ensure all the clips are poking through the holes in the bonnet before applying pressure and engaging any of the clips.

To fit the seal as shown requires 2.3 metres of each seal. The eagle eyed members will see that I have a join in my seal. I ordered 2 metres but it came in 2 x 1 metre lengths. The join is only butted together and has not leaked. It has been constantly tested since fitting about 7 weeks ago and no water is leaking under the Bonnet Strip. The bonnet insulation is staying dry and no water runs out of the back and into the engine bay if you open the bonnet after it rains. The only water that comes out is at either end of the Bonnet Strip (the water that collects in front of the seal) but that runs harmlessly into the drain channel. Very little water runs out, less than I expected. That water will get dispersed if the car is used.

As a precaution, you may want to obtain some replacement clips, they can wear if the Bonnet Strip is removed a few times. I only replaced about 3 clips and my Strip has been removed 7 times in total

I am certain there are other methods to successfully seal the Bonnet Strip, I don’t claim this is the only way to do it.

A few key words to search for when looking for these strips are EPDM, D Profile and foam rubber. Google brings up a lot of manufacturers and bulk sales, E-Bay is probably better for smaller quantities.
 
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lugsy

SEAT
May 21, 2011
56
0
just to let you know guys if your car is under warrenty this is a TPI for this and it comes under warrenty and you even get new soundproofing
 

TimSawf

Active Member
Jun 26, 2011
865
3
South Manchester

Ian2007leon

Guest
Tim

I have noticed that your panel seems different from mine in the pictures. My panel has an inset in it or have you remove this.:confused:
 

TimSawf

Active Member
Jun 26, 2011
865
3
South Manchester
No. On mine, the underside is smooth apart from the mountings for the clips.

Does it look a bit like this. This is the picture from ElsaWin (workshop manual) which is nothing like mine. As far as I could find out, there have been 3 earlier versions discontinued in 2006, 2007 and 2008.

 

Ian2007leon

Guest
Yes the picture above is the type my car has fitted.
Going by the instructions in the link fitting the rubber seal isnt possible in this type as there isn't enough room. Might have to use duck tape or some other method??
 

TimSawf

Active Member
Jun 26, 2011
865
3
South Manchester
Sorry for the confusion, I did check at the time to see if there were different Bonnet Strips but couldn't find any. It was only when you mentioned yours was different, I looked a bit deeper. The current one ends with 699R and the previous ones are 699G and 699K. For some reason, they missed out a load of letters.

If the picture is accurate, it looks a lot more rigid than the current one and should be able to compress harder seals without bowing. The EPDM Rubber Sponge comes in various thickness's and widths. I don't know what the size of the gap will be under this Strip but the general principle may well still apply
 

MIKE THOMPSON

Active Member
Sep 12, 2008
15
0
Bridgend- Mid Glamorgan
Water on left side under bonnet leaking through from scuttle.

I have attempted the seal fix on two occasions seems to work fine on offside under bonnet but water still somehow gets under bonnet and past the seal on the driver's side.Diagonal patch of dampness on sound proofing material under bonnet from nearside top near wiper corner to nsf front of car.

I have a new soundproofing pad but will not fit until sorted and will use the old one as the test for water.
Any ideas? A stupid design fault. 2007 Leon FR -otherwise car is god now at 52k and out of warranty!

Cheers

Mike
 

TimSawf

Active Member
Jun 26, 2011
865
3
South Manchester
It's difficult to guess where the water might be getting in. As it says in the guide, I found 2 places where the water got in, all along the front curved edge of the Bonnet Strip and in the corner by the wiper arm where there is a cut out in the lip at the back. I would suggest doing a water test on those 2 areas to try and narrow it down.

Put some newspaper or plastic over the engine in that corner (to show up any water leak) and spray water on the bonnet and Bonnet Strip only. Then do the same on the nearside of the windscreen and 'A' pillar (making sure no water sprays on the bonnet). Obviously check under the bonnet after each test. If one of them causes a leak, then it sounds like the seal has dislodged or isn't making a sufficient seal.

As stated in Ians' post earlier, my method may not be fully suitable for the older versions of the Bonnet Strip.
 

Lostowl

Active Member
Oct 17, 2010
6
0
Any chance someone could post a link to the 2 different rubber strips needed?

Ta

Edit: I found this

http
://www
.ebay.co.uk/itm/170796934900?ssPageName=STRK:MEWAX:IT&_trksid=p3984.m1423.l2649 (exuse the gap after http but I can't post a link as newbie!

I'm finding searching for the D profile bumper seal more of a headache. Help appreciated
 
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TimSawf

Active Member
Jun 26, 2011
865
3
South Manchester

Lostowl

Active Member
Oct 17, 2010
6
0
I managed to find some on ebid in the end. Thanks for look though

My car is 2008 and the strip looks slightly different to yours. I have actually followed your guide and although I had to really compress the seal to get it to fit it seems to have worked so far. No leaks - touch wood

And that rubber paint is a cracking idea.

Thanks very much!
 

pedxxx

Active Member
Nov 23, 2012
88
2
So bearing in mind the above, if my car is under warranty and has this issue, will the dealer do the job without complaint?
 

Chief

Active Member
Jun 5, 2012
20
0
Hi all, apologies for reviving an old thread

First post so go easy on me!! Just picked a beautiful 57 plate candy white btcc fr tdi with all the gadgets and lo behold I have the same water penetration problem. I was just wondering if this fix would be applicable to my car or would the shapes be different.

I've had a look at Donnyboys tape solution and think it would be very effective and very simple (can't post URL but a quick search would show it). Now I plan to use gorilla tape to seal all the holes and get a new soundproofing mat/layer.

I also plan to use the d foam or something's similar (maybe gorilla tape?) to seal the bonet strip area and use plastidip or rubberised paint to coat the underside of the mat to ensure no mould or sag will occur.

Just wanted people's opinion on this solution and how much difference it would actually make, or if there is anything i should do differently.

Thanks in advance
 

TimSawf

Active Member
Jun 26, 2011
865
3
South Manchester
This exact method probably won't work on your car as it is likely to have an earlier version of the Bonnet Strip. As I haven't seen the older version (only pictures), the design of it may allow water to bypass the seal or there's not enough room to fit the seal. Hopefully, the principle should still apply but the application may need to be totally different.

I am not a great fan of the method of taping up the drain holes, that will just allow water and dirt to accumulate under the Strip (when it's not in use) and that will cause corrosion.

Sorry I can't be more helpful but any suggestions for the earlier version would just be guessing.