Soy-based wiring, nest sites, prevention protocol — what every Las Vegas collector needs to know before leaving a vehicle parked for 30+ days.
Rodent damage is the most expensive failure mode on stored vehicles — and the most preventable. A pack rat or kangaroo rat — both native to the Las Vegas Valley — can build a nest in an engine bay in 72 hours and chew through enough wiring harness in a week to total a $40,000 vehicle on insurance. Modern OEM automotive wiring uses soy-based insulation, which rodents specifically target. A single chewed harness in a Mercedes S-Class can run $6,500 in parts and labor. At REVCity Auto Storage — 7185 Bermuda Rd, Las Vegas NV 89119, 725-272-1803 — we run a fully sealed, climate-controlled facility with no rodent ingress points. This guide covers what is happening, why modern cars are more vulnerable than older ones, and the prevention protocol that works.
Automotive manufacturers began transitioning wire harness insulation from petroleum-based plastics to soy-based bioplastics roughly 2008–2012, with most major brands fully transitioned by 2016. The motivation was environmental — soy-based insulation is biodegradable and lower-emission to produce. The unintended consequence: rodents find soy insulation palatable in a way they never found PVC.
The class-action lawsuits started in 2016. Toyota, Honda, Subaru, and others have all faced legal action from owners whose vehicles were destroyed by rodent damage to soy wiring. The lawsuits have largely been unsuccessful — courts have ruled that rodent damage is environmental and outside manufacturer warranty — which means the cost falls on owners and insurers.
The damage radius is not limited to the wiring itself. A rodent that chews a single ground wire on a 2018 BMW 7 Series can trigger 30+ fault codes, disable the vehicle’s stability control, and put the car in limp mode. Diagnosis alone runs 4–6 shop hours at $180–$220 per hour before parts. Full harness replacement on a luxury European vehicle ranges $4,000–$12,000.
Clark County’s desert ecosystem hosts several rodent species that target vehicles. Each has different behavior patterns and different prevention requirements.
What makes Las Vegas particularly hostile for stored vehicles is the combination of desert wildlife pressure and seasonal temperature extremes. In July, an engine bay sitting at 90°F overnight in a garage is the coolest, most appealing shelter in the surrounding ecosystem. In January, the same engine bay holds residual warmth that draws rodents seeking refuge from desert overnight lows.
Rodent prevention is environmental. Repellents, deterrents, and traps all have limited efficacy compared to physical exclusion. The protocol below is layered — combining facility selection, vehicle preparation, and ongoing monitoring.
Layer 1 — Facility selection. The single most effective prevention measure is storing in a fully sealed, climate-controlled facility. REVCity’s construction includes sealed perimeter walls, no shared plumbing chases with neighboring units, gasketed door seals, and active climate control that maintains a temperature unattractive to wildlife seeking thermal refuge. Residential garages with weather-stripped doors but unsealed dryer vents, water heater closets, and attic openings provide multiple rodent ingress paths.
Layer 2 — Vehicle preparation. Before storage, vacuum the interior thoroughly, remove all food residue (a single dropped french fry under a seat is rodent attractant), and check the cabin air filter housing. Stuff a piece of fine steel wool into the exhaust tailpipe(s) — rodents will not chew through steel wool. Tape over external air intakes with painter’s tape. Park with hood cracked open if storage is short-term and you can monitor — closed hoods create the warm, dark cavity rodents prefer.
Layer 3 — Deterrents (limited effectiveness). Peppermint oil sachets, Bounce dryer sheets, and Irish Spring soap shavings are all widely recommended on collector forums. Evidence is mixed. They do not hurt and add a marginal layer of olfactory deterrence. Ultrasonic devices have minimal documented effectiveness — rodents acclimate within 1–2 weeks.
Layer 4 — Monitoring. If storing at home or in non-climate facilities, set unbaited snap traps in the engine bay and trunk monthly. Check droppings around the vehicle perimeter. Any sign of activity warrants immediate inspection and increased trapping.
Run this checklist before any storage period of 30+ days. It takes approximately one hour and prevents the vast majority of rodent intrusion events.
| Step | Action | Time | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Vacuum interior — seats, carpet, trunk | 15 min | Removes food residue that attracts rodents |
| 2 | Wipe down interior with mild cleaner | 10 min | Eliminates scent trails of dropped food |
| 3 | Steel wool in exhaust tailpipe(s) | 2 min | Prevents ingress through the largest opening |
| 4 | Painter’s tape over external air intakes | 5 min | Closes cabin air and ECU intake paths |
| 5 | Check cabin air filter for existing debris | 5 min | Catches early-stage nesting attempts |
| 6 | Inspect engine bay for prior activity | 5 min | Droppings, gnawed insulation, nesting material |
| 7 | Place 4–6 peppermint sachets in cabin/trunk/engine bay | 5 min | Marginal olfactory deterrent, no downside |
| 8 | Set 2 unbaited snap traps under vehicle (monitoring) | 5 min | Early warning system if storage is in home garage |
| 9 | Connect battery tender (NOT trickle charger) | 3 min | Prevents battery death — separate from rodent issue but always done together |
| 10 | Remove steel wool and tape BEFORE first startup in spring | 5 min | Critical — running engine with exhaust plugged is destructive |
The reason purpose-built storage facilities like REVCity do not have rodent problems is architectural. A residential garage is not constructed to exclude wildlife. Standard residential garages have:
Unsealed dryer vents leading directly outdoors. Water heater closets with floor drains connecting to plumbing chases. Attic access openings with no rodent-rated seals. Garage door weather-stripping that degrades within 2–3 years. Shared walls with attached living spaces that have their own ingress paths.
REVCity’s purpose-built construction eliminates each of these failure modes. The facility runs as a sealed envelope — perimeter walls penetrate the slab on rodent-rated flashings, HVAC intakes are screened to 1/8 inch mesh, plumbing penetrations are sealed with rodent-rated escutcheons, and door seals are inspected on a maintenance schedule. We have not had a documented rodent intrusion event in the storage bays since opening.
This is not unique to REVCity — it is a function of purpose-built facility design. Generic self-storage and many car storage facilities that retrofitted existing warehouses do not meet this standard. Climate-controlled vs temperature-controlled distinctions matter here too — actively conditioned air at controlled humidity dries out the nesting materials rodents collect and removes the comfort gradient that attracts them in the first place.
For collector vehicles, the calculus is straightforward. A $2,000–$8,000 wiring harness claim every 2–3 years offsets several years of professional storage fees, and the insurance trail of an uncontested rodent damage event will follow a vehicle through resale.
Sealed climate-controlled facility. 24/7 monitored. Battery tenders at every space. Call 725-272-1803 for purpose-built car storage in Las Vegas.