Landlover99
Active Member
- Posts
- 267
- Location
- Extreme North West
Hi all,
Well, after my wipers packed up I determined by various means that the problem was the wiper motor. And indeed there is a serious fault with that motor, so buying a new one was not a waste of money. But it's clearly not the whole story, since the wipers are still frozen in position and immovable even when the linkage mechanism to the motor is disconnected. So there is some fault I need to locate that will be either in the sheathed drive cable that comes out of the motor, or else in the wiper wheel boxes or possibly the actual wiper shafts themselves may have seized solid in their bearings for some reason.
I understand this is not an uncommon problem from the old threads I've read, but which of these components is the usual culprit when this happens; it's typical failure mode and is it readily fixable and/or will it require an entire new 'drive train' between motor and wiper shafts?
Ta,
LL
Well, after my wipers packed up I determined by various means that the problem was the wiper motor. And indeed there is a serious fault with that motor, so buying a new one was not a waste of money. But it's clearly not the whole story, since the wipers are still frozen in position and immovable even when the linkage mechanism to the motor is disconnected. So there is some fault I need to locate that will be either in the sheathed drive cable that comes out of the motor, or else in the wiper wheel boxes or possibly the actual wiper shafts themselves may have seized solid in their bearings for some reason.
I understand this is not an uncommon problem from the old threads I've read, but which of these components is the usual culprit when this happens; it's typical failure mode and is it readily fixable and/or will it require an entire new 'drive train' between motor and wiper shafts?
Ta,
LL