Carbon buildup can keep a motor from firing and cause an engine to stall.
your cv axels and or power steering pump has to much load on your motor change the pump. cv joints scrub speed in corners but will not make car stall
EGR problem
The AC pump is bad. When the AC is turned on the pump tries to turn, because it is bad the extra strain on the motor causes it to stall. Be carely this can break or through a belt. In short its like putting a "brake" on your motor.
1st try checking the EGR valve. If the EGR valve is sticking or leaking it can force too much air into the air/fuel mixture causing the motor to stall out.
I would worry more about the tranny than the U-joints, a lot of people run a stall converter and don't have a problem but it puts a lot more stress on the tranny.
Stoll condition of a motor or Stall torque is the torque which is produced by a device when the output rotational speed is zero. It may also mean the torque load that causes the output rotational speed of a device to become zero - i.e. to cause stalling.Stalling is a condition when the motor stops rotating.This condition occurs when the load torque is greater than the motor shaft torque i.e. break down condition.In this condition the motor draws maximum current but the motor does not rotate.The current is called as Stalling current.
A problem in the fuel line could cause it to stall. On a stick shift, letting off the clutch too soon would cause the vehicle to stall.
Fast idle motor defective.
No.
No. The water on the road won't make your vehicle stall.
stall at a higher airspeed.