Rain, rain go away

Update on the wiper:

Turns out, the wiper switch has two spade connectors that are connected
together, one of which is used to supply power to the switch and wiper. The
other one is unused, bot hot.

My switch was rotated in such a way as to bring that unused hot spade lug
close to the headlight switch next door (actually, "above" in the picture
below--the photo site turned the picture sideways). When I turned off the
wiper at a rest stop, the whole switch rotated slightly, and it made
contact. That dead short caused the thermal breaker to break.

Ken saw the issue looking through the windshield when I was fiddling with
it in the driver's seat. He crimped a cord in a spade connector "so you
don't lose it WHEN you drop it" to cover and protect that unused lug. It's
the one buried on the right, which is now at the bottom of the switch. I
pulled the switch and reoriented it in addition to installing the
protector.

http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/misc/p63111-electric-wiper-switch.html

I also enlarged the hole around the knob using a Dremel, which removes the
recessed section and allows me to install the knob firmly without
interference from the plastic instrument panel. I did the same with the
headlight switch, so I can remove the panel without removing those knobs.

Motor was fine, switch was fine, and the intermittent function of the
push-to-wash was also resolved.

By the way, only O'Reilly's and Carquest list the motor--Advance and
Autozone no longer do. I did not check NAPA.

Rick "works like a charm now" Denney

> ...
> And I think my Rock Auto wiper motor has fried--dead short to ground. Had
> to cut the wire--the bits on the thermal breaker are rusted in place and
> eventually that breaker was going to give up the ghost, testing that
> circuit every ten or fifteen seconds as it was doing. Gotta find some
> RainX.
>
>
> --
'73 230 "Jaws"
Northern Virginia
rick at rickdenney dot com
 
Billy, what happened to the edit button on the photos page? I can't find
the edit button to edit the text of the photo.

Rick "who didn't write the text with the expectation that the photo would
be rotated" Denney

> Update on the wiper:
>
> Turns out, the wiper switch has two spade connectors that are connected
> together, one of which is used to supply power to the switch and wiper. The
> other one is unused, bot hot.
>
> My switch was rotated in such a way as to bring that unused hot spade lug
> close to the headlight switch next door (actually, "above" in the picture
> below--the photo site turned the picture sideways). When I turned off the
> wiper at a rest stop, the whole switch rotated slightly, and it made
> contact. That dead short caused the thermal breaker to break.
>
> Ken saw the issue looking through the windshield when I was fiddling with
> it in the driver's seat. He crimped a cord in a spade connector "so you
> don't lose it WHEN you drop it" to cover and protect that unused lug. It's
> the one buried on the right, which is now at the bottom of the switch. I
> pulled the switch and reoriented it in addition to installing the
> protector.
>
> http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/misc/p63111-electric-wiper-switch.html
>
> I also enlarged the hole around the knob using a Dremel, which removes the
> recessed section and allows me to install the knob firmly without
> interference from the plastic instrument panel. I did the same with the
> headlight switch, so I can remove the panel without removing those knobs.
>
> Motor was fine, switch was fine, and the intermittent function of the
> push-to-wash was also resolved.
>
> By the way, only O'Reilly's and Carquest list the motor--Advance and
> Autozone no longer do. I did not check NAPA.
>
> Rick "works like a charm now" Denney
>

>
>> ...
>> And I think my Rock Auto wiper motor has fried--dead short to ground. Had
>> to cut the wire--the bits on the thermal breaker are rusted in place and
>> eventually that breaker was going to give up the ghost, testing that
>> circuit every ten or fifteen seconds as it was doing. Gotta find some
>> RainX.
>>
>>
>> --
> '73 230 "Jaws"
> Northern Virginia
> rick at rickdenney dot com
>

--
'73 230 "Jaws"
Northern Virginia
rick at rickdenney dot com
 
It's not likely that I'll ever be able to eliminate all the "gotchas" from
the electric wiper kit (nor anything else in human activities). But,
future shipments of the switch will have either a connector or a bit of
heat-shrink tubing on that hot terminal so maybe no one else will become
Rickasized in a downpour like he did.

Ken H.
Americus, GA
'76 X-Birchaven w/Cad500/Howell EFI & EBL,
Manny Brakes & 1-Ton, etc., etc., etc.
www.gmcwipersetc.com

> Update on the wiper:
>
> Turns out, the wiper switch has two spade connectors that are connected
> together, one of which is used to supply power to the switch and wiper. The
> other one is unused, bot hot.
>
> My switch was rotated in such a way as to bring that unused hot spade lug
> close to the headlight switch next door (actually, "above" in the picture
> below--the photo site turned the picture sideways). When I turned off the
> wiper at a rest stop, the whole switch rotated slightly, and it made
> contact. That dead short caused the thermal breaker to break.
>
> Ken saw the issue looking through the windshield when I was fiddling with
> it in the driver's seat. He crimped a cord in a spade connector "so you
> don't lose it WHEN you drop it" to cover and protect that unused lug. It's
> the one buried on the right, which is now at the bottom of the switch. I
> pulled the switch and reoriented it in addition to installing the
> protector.
>
> http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/misc/p63111-electric-wiper-switch.html
>
> I also enlarged the hole around the knob using a Dremel, which removes the
> recessed section and allows me to install the knob firmly without
> interference from the plastic instrument panel. I did the same with the
> headlight switch, so I can remove the panel without removing those knobs.
>
> Motor was fine, switch was fine, and the intermittent function of the
> push-to-wash was also resolved.
>
> By the way, only O'Reilly's and Carquest list the motor--Advance and
> Autozone no longer do. I did not check NAPA.
>
> Rick "works like a charm now" Denney
>

>
> > ...
> > And I think my Rock Auto wiper motor has fried--dead short to ground. Had
> > to cut the wire--the bits on the thermal breaker are rusted in place and
> > eventually that breaker was going to give up the ghost, testing that
> > circuit every ten or fifteen seconds as it was doing. Gotta find some
> > RainX.
> >
> >
> > --
> '73 230 "Jaws"
> Northern Virginia
> rick at rickdenney dot com
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