This may have been mentioned before, but it may not hurt to mention it again. Take an old newspaper, stick it somewhere on the trunk flange then shut the trunk lid. Give the newspaper a pull, if it is held securely, open trunk, move newspaper and do all over again. If you find a place where the paper isn't held tightly, take a big rubber hammer, and tap the trunk flange from underneath, bending it upward slightly. That should take care of any areas where the seal isn't clamping firmly. Also, investigate the floor seams in the trunk, especially around the wheelhouses. Sometimes the factory undercoating may have fell out or been incomplete, then when you drive the car in the rain, the tires toss moisture up into the trunk. Trunk leaks can be a bear to find sometimes, so hopefully this will help, if nothing else does. Phil <>< ----- Original Message ----- From: "Mark McDonald" <tomswift@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Saturday, January 02, 1904 11:49 PM Subject: Re: IML: leaking trunk > I've done all these things and still haven't been able to locate the leak > in the trunk of my '71. > > I believe it is now coming from the area of the taillight. > > The neighbor with hose/me in trunk trick yeilded nothing. > > I may have to live with it. > > MM >