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Car bad odor anybody else experience this

Wow, very impressive. Since it sounds like a design issue, won't this process need to be done again in the future? I hate the smell but I don't think I have the guts to be drilling holes in my car and spraying things into them :(
 
Wow, very impressive. Since it sounds like a design issue, won't this process need to be done again in the future? I hate the smell but I don't think I have the guts to be drilling holes in my car and spraying things into them :(


the cure may have some preventative effect too. It seems to happen more in the southern, more humid regions. It is also possible, from what I've read, to just spray in the intake but that may not be as effective.
 
I've unfortunately dealt with this awful smell all year in my 2015 5.0 Ultimate. The summers are bad and the smell is embarrassing. I've used a couple of mildew removers to small success but the odor comes right back after a week or so. I guess I'm not getting down deep enough to kill all the mildew. I would very much appreciate a pic of where you drilled the air handler.
 
Mark_888 while there “may” be hundreds of posts, I don’t think there are hundreds of individual posters. Because of the way the search is done on this site it hard to know. So I am assuming that it is just your guess that hundreds of individuals have complained about this issue. You say it with such conviction like you actually know this for a fact and can support your assertion.
No, there are thousands of posts, and over a hundred who have posted, and many thousands who have also been affected but not posted (or not members of this forum).

Denial is not a river in Africa. The problem is pervasive due to a design defect (dealers know about this and can only spray disinfectant spray in the HVAC vents). Not everyone is affected, only because of environmental (weather) conditions in their area are not conducive to mold or mildew, or because some don't have very good sense of smell, or some are in denial.
 
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No, there are thousands of posts, and over a hundred who have posted, and many thousands who have also been affected but not posted (or not members of this forum).

Denial is not a river in Africa. The problem is pervasive due to a design defect (dealers know about this and can only spray disinfectant spray in the HVAC vents). Not everyone is affected, only because of environmental (weather) conditions in their area are not conducive to mold or mildew, or because some don't have very good sense of smell, or some are in denial.

You are not comprehending what I wrote. I am sure there are a thousand posts but most are multiple posts by the same folks. How many INDIVIDUAL people have posted. Not a thousand I bet
 
You are not comprehending what I wrote. I am sure there are a thousand posts but most are multiple posts by the same folks. How many INDIVIDUAL people have posted. Not a thousand I bet
I understand exactly what you said. More than a hundred individual posters across multiple threads since 2015 MY.

As mfaile said above, it is embarrassing.
 
I have a 2017 G80 and the same bad odor . They have had the car two weeks and still no resolution.
 
Changing out the cabin filter and spraying the "air intake" on the outside below the windshield with a product made for this issue did the trick for me (got it at Wal-Mart.). Two months without the odor.
 
The problem is a poor design of the interior air handling system. There are two radiator like (heat/cooling) exchangers which live in a totally inaccessible assembly in the middle of the dash. Tight against the firewall. They become contaminated with mildew and or mold. That is the smell, and it can be embarrassing unpleasant not just to the owners, but their unsuspecting passengers as well.
First the good news. It can be sanitized which completely removes the problem. COMPLETELY!
The bad news. I had to do it myself. As far as I know, the dealer has not been given any guidance on the issue.
How is it corrected?
With several cans of "AC odor eliminator". I purchased mine from Napa .https://www.napaonline.com/en/p/BK_7653141 Cost is $10.99 each as of this posting. I used 3 cans (they're not very big)
The product kills the organisms and it doesn't require rinsing as most household mold/mildew cleaners do.
The first can I injected alongside the air conditioner evaporator coil. To access that coil. I had to remove the glove compartment assembly. They using a dremel tool, I made a dime size hole at a calculated point in the "Air handler assembly" I mentioned at the start of the post. That allowed me to snake the long tube that comes with the product, right up next to the evaporator coil. I discharged the whole can. The foam gets into all the nooks and cranny's of the coil and its surrounding housing. I waited for the foam to totally liquefy and run off down the drain in the assembly which is for condensate run off. I then put a small piece of heavy tape over the hole, and reassembled the glove box. All this was step 1. It removed about 70% of the odor.
Step 2 was to do the same to the heater coil. Don't ask me why moisture loving mildew and mold get on a dry heater coil, but in this this design...it does.
Anyway, this part is much easier. There is a "drain" located under the car, passengers side. It is where the evaporator coil drain and heater drain discharge. They connect together under the dash board and exit as one hose under the car.
All you need to do here is snake the long lose that comes with the product, up as far as you can. Then pinch the drain hose tight against the product hose so the foam can only go in one direction. Up into the coil area.
I injected 2 cans in this area.
Because of the way the hose splits, very little will go toward the air conditioner evaporator. That why I did that coil separately. (90%) will go to the heater coil and the housing around it.
I waited several hours, then ran the fan on max to move any remaining product through the duct work.
It's been several months and the smell is still completely gone.
Since I wasn't sure it would work, I didn't take photos. But if there is enough interest, I would take the glove box apart again to show everyone where EXACTLY to drill the dime size hole. The drain under the car is easily visible, if you know where to look and what it looks like.

This wasn't a "cross your fingers" attempt.
I did a bunch of research on how Genesis designed the Air Handling System in this car. I found pictures of the assembly, and pictures of it parts/components. I was able to calculate precisely where these stinky coils where, and confirmed it by snaking a endoscope camera in where I had drilled my access hole. I could clearly see the air conditioner coil on my laptop. I taped the endoscope camera to the product injector hose, and guided it precisely where It needed to be. When I injected the foam product, I could see it on the Laptop screen via the endoscope camera. These USB endoscope cameras cost less than $20.00 on ebay.



Hello,
I have a 2017 Genesis G80 and live in Florida. After about 8 months my G80 developed a nasty odor kinda like moldy mop water. So I sent it to the dealer "Jenkins Hyundai" and they told me that my cabin filter needed to be changed and that would correct the problem...oh and it's not covered under warranty, so they charged me North of $160 to change the filter and disinfect the A/C system.

That was a short lived fix at my expense. A few months later the same problem reoccurred so they disinfected the AC system again, didn't touch the cab filter and didn't charge me anything this time.

After my next complaint of the odor, I was told that they depressurized or emptied the evaporator coil and injected some type of chemical to SEAL THE EVAPORATOR FOR LEAKS! So apparently the evaporators are failing/leaking and allowing moisture to retain inside thus the mold then develops throughout the system and forced into the passenger cabin.

So I smelled the toxic like chemical for a few weeks when I turned the A/C on in the car...I had to open the windows and let it clear-out. After a couple of weeks the 2 odors stopped, but when it is hot outside the the sealent chemical and the bad moldy oder presented again....twice now. Winter has now settled in and there's no oder again. This is Florida, so I expect issues to present again when the weather gets hot again this spring or summer of 2019

The dealership wont do anything else for me at this time. I asked for a New Evaporator, but they said no. Now I'm mad, so I bought an ozone machine to kill the mold and eliminate the toxins as best as possible. After all, we breath this air in the car with our windows closed for extended periods of time.

Unfortunately I'm stuck in the 2nd year of a 3 year lease and am already looking at new cars. I need to use this car for real estate sales and it's pretty embarrassing every time I start the car with a client inside. I hope it doesn't hurt my health or theirs!
 
After my next complaint of the odor, I was told that they depressurized or emptied the evaporator coil and injected some type of chemical to SEAL THE EVAPORATOR FOR LEAKS! So apparently the evaporators are failing/leaking and allowing moisture to retain inside thus the mold then develops throughout the system and forced into the passenger cabin.
This makes no sense. The evaporator coil is not leaking. If it was, the AC would not work at all. It does not leak anything from inside that would cause the mold.

There is ducting that directs air over the evaporator coil. When air passes over it, moisture in the air will turn from vapor to liquid and there is a drain for it to leak out to the road. Sometimes the drains plug up and cause problems.

If it is mold in the duct it can be difficult to eradicate. Sounds like they tried though. Not sure what they sealed.

I don't have a cure for you, but I do have a thought. If the dealer did not do a good job and I had to pay for any remedy, I'd search out a good Auto AC shop and talk to them. They may have a better idea and better solution for you. If there are mold spores, I'd change the cabin filter at the service whether it look clean or not. Mold spores can be difficult to get rid of. Unless you can get in there and Clorox the entire system.
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I have not yet had this issue in my Genesis. I did have in in my Q5 and it was an unpleasant experience. I finally had the deodorizing done at the dealer, and then every time I drove with the AC on, I would switch from AC to just the blower within several miles of my destination to dry off any condensation before I arrived and the car sat. That seemed to keep the smell from coming back.
 
This makes no sense. The evaporator coil is not leaking. If it was, the AC would not work at all. It does not leak anything from inside that would cause the mold.

There is ducting that directs air over the evaporator coil. When air passes over it, moisture in the air will turn from vapor to liquid and there is a drain for it to leak out to the road. Sometimes the drains plug up and cause problems.

If it is mold in the duct it can be difficult to eradicate. Sounds like they tried though. Not sure what they sealed.

I don't have a cure for you, but I do have a thought. If the dealer did not do a good job and I had to pay for any remedy, I'd search out a good Auto AC shop and talk to them. They may have a better idea and better solution for you. If there are mold spores, I'd change the cabin filter at the service whether it look clean or not. Mold spores can be difficult to get rid of. Unless you can get in there and Clorox the entire system.


I have just experienced this situation in 2015 G 5.0. ( In DC in the dead of winter)
I first noticed the Smart Vent running frequently late late fall early early winter ie earlymid Dec.
Then had the 90,000 mile service done and within two days noticed the mold smell
I took it to the dealer they ran some chemical through the system that did not work
Took it back and had the filters replaced - the one he took out I smelled and it was moldy
They ran some more chem through and replaced one filter - seemed to be getting better but now is noticeable again - I also tried to run lysol through the vent intake - no long term joy.
I will be taking it back again to replace all filters.
The problem is a poor design of the interior air handling system. There are two radiator like (heat/cooling) exchangers which live in a totally inaccessible assembly in the middle of the dash. Tight against the firewall. They become contaminated with mildew and or mold. That is the smell, and it can be embarrassing unpleasant not just to the owners, but their unsuspecting passengers as well.
First the good news. It can be sanitized which completely removes the problem. COMPLETELY!
The bad news. I had to do it myself. As far as I know, the dealer has not been given any guidance on the issue.
How is it corrected?
With several cans of "AC odor eliminator". I purchased mine from Napa .https://www.napaonline.com/en/p/BK_7653141 Cost is $10.99 each as of this posting. I used 3 cans (they're not very big)
The product kills the organisms and it doesn't require rinsing as most household mold/mildew cleaners do.
The first can I injected alongside the air conditioner evaporator coil. To access that coil. I had to remove the glove compartment assembly. They using a dremel tool, I made a dime size hole at a calculated point in the "Air handler assembly" I mentioned at the start of the post. That allowed me to snake the long tube that comes with the product, right up next to the evaporator coil. I discharged the whole can. The foam gets into all the nooks and cranny's of the coil and its surrounding housing. I waited for the foam to totally liquefy and run off down the drain in the assembly which is for condensate run off. I then put a small piece of heavy tape over the hole, and reassembled the glove box. All this was step 1. It removed about 70% of the odor.
Step 2 was to do the same to the heater coil. Don't ask me why moisture loving mildew and mold get on a dry heater coil, but in this this design...it does.
Anyway, this part is much easier. There is a "drain" located under the car, passengers side. It is where the evaporator coil drain and heater drain discharge. They connect together under the dash board and exit as one hose under the car.
All you need to do here is snake the long lose that comes with the product, up as far as you can. Then pinch the drain hose tight against the product hose so the foam can only go in one direction. Up into the coil area.
I injected 2 cans in this area.
Because of the way the hose splits, very little will go toward the air conditioner evaporator. That why I did that coil separately. (90%) will go to the heater coil and the housing around it.
I waited several hours, then ran the fan on max to move any remaining product through the duct work.
It's been several months and the smell is still completely gone.
Since I wasn't sure it would work, I didn't take photos. But if there is enough interest, I would take the glove box apart again to show everyone where EXACTLY to drill the dime size hole. The drain under the car is easily visible, if you know where to look and what it looks like.

This wasn't a "cross your fingers" attempt.
I did a bunch of research on how Genesis designed the Air Handling System in this car. I found pictures of the assembly, and pictures of it parts/components. I was able to calculate precisely where these stinky coils where, and confirmed it by snaking a endoscope camera in where I had drilled my access hole. I could clearly see the air conditioner coil on my laptop. I taped the endoscope camera to the product injector hose, and guided it precisely where It needed to be. When I injected the foam product, I could see it on the Laptop screen via the endoscope camera. These USB endoscope cameras cost less than $20.00 on ebay.


John, I would like your detailed fix too please.
 
Changing out the cabin filter and spraying the "air intake" on the outside below the windshield with a product made for this issue did the trick for me (got it at Wal-Mart.). Two months without the odor.


Please provide the name of the product. Thanks!
 
+1 on the cabin air filter. I bought mine Certified and it had that same smell. I took it back and made them fix it. Much better now!

What was the fix?
 
Does anyone of you carry RainX in your trunk? If you do, take it out. Drive your car couple of times and thank me later. I had really bad smell in my car that I couldn't describe until I figured out it must have been caused by RainX vaporizing or slightly leaking out in my trunk. Had the same exact smell in my previous car and I always carried bottle of RainX in my trunk. Smell never came back when I removed the bottle many many months ago. Might be some other things in your trunk causing it so start there.
 
It would be helpful to members if you,all would state your locations.
Guess I’m lucky to live in Phx. a area with extremely low humidity so have not in my 4 years of ownership had the mildew problem.
 
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