Nope. Nope. Nope. Nope. and Nope.
Flash floods can be incredibly dense, full of mud, rocks, trees, and other debris. Their consistency can be close to that of wet concrete and can exert far more force than water alone. Also, floods will
rapidly change the stream bed and the banks.
I was hit by a major cloudburst on my way to Moab one year, easily the worst storm I've ever seen in the desert -- and that's saying something since I've lived here most my life. The next day we were taking a trail that followed a stream bed. It was washed out, but driveable. At one point the road climbed over a hill and the stream went around it in an oxbow. The lead vehicle stopped at the top of the hill and called me up on the CB to hike up. When I arrived, I found the other half of the hill was
missing. It was a 15-20 foot vertical drop down to the stream bed.
If one storm can do that, there is no way I'm risking my life and my vehicle for a crossing. It's time to backtrack or make camp and wait for the water to recede.
Check out the YouTube channel
RankinStudio. This guy is based in southern Utah and manages to regularly predict flash flooding and shows up in time to film the flood arrive. Take a look at how thick those flows can be and tell me you want to drive through it.