Today, I did a job/modification I had been intending to do for a while. Headlight Washers, on my FL1.
My original plan was to have a separate pump and operating switch, but recently watched a Range Rover operate his windscreen washers while the headlights got a wash too. That’s when I recalled a Toyota Celica I once owned – and loved. It too had headlight washers that operated alongside the windscreen washers.
So why complicate matters when a job can be done simply?
I bought two washer-jets, two plastic hose tee-pieces and black plastic tubing.
See the attached pictures and accompanying details...
2Pcs Universal Windscreen Washer Jet Water Spray Nozzle Fit Vehicle Most Cars.
T JOINER Piece 3 WAY PLASTIC BARBED CONNECTOR PIPE HOSE Reducer Air Fuel Water
I use 5mm pieces.
1M Polyurethane Tube PU Air Pneumatic Plastic Pipe Hose 6mm (OD) x 4mm (ID)
The jets needed a 9.5mm hole each (other types may need a different size) and the tubing threaded through the bodywork to be joined onto the car’s existing washer piping.
The job took only 50 minutes to do, and it all works extremely well.
Cheap-as-chips too.
Oh yeah, all the bits were bought on Ebay.uk
My original plan was to have a separate pump and operating switch, but recently watched a Range Rover operate his windscreen washers while the headlights got a wash too. That’s when I recalled a Toyota Celica I once owned – and loved. It too had headlight washers that operated alongside the windscreen washers.
So why complicate matters when a job can be done simply?
I bought two washer-jets, two plastic hose tee-pieces and black plastic tubing.
See the attached pictures and accompanying details...
2Pcs Universal Windscreen Washer Jet Water Spray Nozzle Fit Vehicle Most Cars.
T JOINER Piece 3 WAY PLASTIC BARBED CONNECTOR PIPE HOSE Reducer Air Fuel Water
I use 5mm pieces.
1M Polyurethane Tube PU Air Pneumatic Plastic Pipe Hose 6mm (OD) x 4mm (ID)
The jets needed a 9.5mm hole each (other types may need a different size) and the tubing threaded through the bodywork to be joined onto the car’s existing washer piping.
The job took only 50 minutes to do, and it all works extremely well.
Cheap-as-chips too.
Oh yeah, all the bits were bought on Ebay.uk