97 TJ wiper problem
#1
Guest
Posts: n/a
97 TJ wiper problem
The wipers stop as soon as the switch is turned off, not when they
return to the bottom of the glass. I figured it was the switch and
took the opertunity to upgrade to intermittent. Same problem with new
switch. my only guess is maybe a bad sensor on the control motor or
something like that?!?
return to the bottom of the glass. I figured it was the switch and
took the opertunity to upgrade to intermittent. Same problem with new
switch. my only guess is maybe a bad sensor on the control motor or
something like that?!?
#2
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 97 TJ wiper problem
If they didn't screw with the design too much, it means your Jeep has
lost the ground to the windshield or to the motor anyway.
When you shut it off, it sends power to a second line that has it's own
ground as well as a copper slide inside the motor. The motor turns
along the copper slide until it come to a gap, then it parks. If this
second circuit is missing power from a bad switch or the ground, then
when you turn the switch off, it stops the motor.
So basically when the motor is off, there is still one hot line coming
to it. This is the line with the trouble.
I would first run a booster cable to the windshield frame or wiper motor
case from the battery negative to see if that fixes it, if it does then
the wire mesh ground from the engine to the firewall is likely toasted.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
ron wrote:
>
> The wipers stop as soon as the switch is turned off, not when they
> return to the bottom of the glass. I figured it was the switch and
> took the opertunity to upgrade to intermittent. Same problem with new
> switch. my only guess is maybe a bad sensor on the control motor or
> something like that?!?
lost the ground to the windshield or to the motor anyway.
When you shut it off, it sends power to a second line that has it's own
ground as well as a copper slide inside the motor. The motor turns
along the copper slide until it come to a gap, then it parks. If this
second circuit is missing power from a bad switch or the ground, then
when you turn the switch off, it stops the motor.
So basically when the motor is off, there is still one hot line coming
to it. This is the line with the trouble.
I would first run a booster cable to the windshield frame or wiper motor
case from the battery negative to see if that fixes it, if it does then
the wire mesh ground from the engine to the firewall is likely toasted.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
ron wrote:
>
> The wipers stop as soon as the switch is turned off, not when they
> return to the bottom of the glass. I figured it was the switch and
> took the opertunity to upgrade to intermittent. Same problem with new
> switch. my only guess is maybe a bad sensor on the control motor or
> something like that?!?
#3
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 97 TJ wiper problem
If they didn't screw with the design too much, it means your Jeep has
lost the ground to the windshield or to the motor anyway.
When you shut it off, it sends power to a second line that has it's own
ground as well as a copper slide inside the motor. The motor turns
along the copper slide until it come to a gap, then it parks. If this
second circuit is missing power from a bad switch or the ground, then
when you turn the switch off, it stops the motor.
So basically when the motor is off, there is still one hot line coming
to it. This is the line with the trouble.
I would first run a booster cable to the windshield frame or wiper motor
case from the battery negative to see if that fixes it, if it does then
the wire mesh ground from the engine to the firewall is likely toasted.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
ron wrote:
>
> The wipers stop as soon as the switch is turned off, not when they
> return to the bottom of the glass. I figured it was the switch and
> took the opertunity to upgrade to intermittent. Same problem with new
> switch. my only guess is maybe a bad sensor on the control motor or
> something like that?!?
lost the ground to the windshield or to the motor anyway.
When you shut it off, it sends power to a second line that has it's own
ground as well as a copper slide inside the motor. The motor turns
along the copper slide until it come to a gap, then it parks. If this
second circuit is missing power from a bad switch or the ground, then
when you turn the switch off, it stops the motor.
So basically when the motor is off, there is still one hot line coming
to it. This is the line with the trouble.
I would first run a booster cable to the windshield frame or wiper motor
case from the battery negative to see if that fixes it, if it does then
the wire mesh ground from the engine to the firewall is likely toasted.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
ron wrote:
>
> The wipers stop as soon as the switch is turned off, not when they
> return to the bottom of the glass. I figured it was the switch and
> took the opertunity to upgrade to intermittent. Same problem with new
> switch. my only guess is maybe a bad sensor on the control motor or
> something like that?!?
#4
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 97 TJ wiper problem
If they didn't screw with the design too much, it means your Jeep has
lost the ground to the windshield or to the motor anyway.
When you shut it off, it sends power to a second line that has it's own
ground as well as a copper slide inside the motor. The motor turns
along the copper slide until it come to a gap, then it parks. If this
second circuit is missing power from a bad switch or the ground, then
when you turn the switch off, it stops the motor.
So basically when the motor is off, there is still one hot line coming
to it. This is the line with the trouble.
I would first run a booster cable to the windshield frame or wiper motor
case from the battery negative to see if that fixes it, if it does then
the wire mesh ground from the engine to the firewall is likely toasted.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
ron wrote:
>
> The wipers stop as soon as the switch is turned off, not when they
> return to the bottom of the glass. I figured it was the switch and
> took the opertunity to upgrade to intermittent. Same problem with new
> switch. my only guess is maybe a bad sensor on the control motor or
> something like that?!?
lost the ground to the windshield or to the motor anyway.
When you shut it off, it sends power to a second line that has it's own
ground as well as a copper slide inside the motor. The motor turns
along the copper slide until it come to a gap, then it parks. If this
second circuit is missing power from a bad switch or the ground, then
when you turn the switch off, it stops the motor.
So basically when the motor is off, there is still one hot line coming
to it. This is the line with the trouble.
I would first run a booster cable to the windshield frame or wiper motor
case from the battery negative to see if that fixes it, if it does then
the wire mesh ground from the engine to the firewall is likely toasted.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
ron wrote:
>
> The wipers stop as soon as the switch is turned off, not when they
> return to the bottom of the glass. I figured it was the switch and
> took the opertunity to upgrade to intermittent. Same problem with new
> switch. my only guess is maybe a bad sensor on the control motor or
> something like that?!?
#5
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 97 TJ wiper problem
If they didn't screw with the design too much, it means your Jeep has
lost the ground to the windshield or to the motor anyway.
When you shut it off, it sends power to a second line that has it's own
ground as well as a copper slide inside the motor. The motor turns
along the copper slide until it come to a gap, then it parks. If this
second circuit is missing power from a bad switch or the ground, then
when you turn the switch off, it stops the motor.
So basically when the motor is off, there is still one hot line coming
to it. This is the line with the trouble.
I would first run a booster cable to the windshield frame or wiper motor
case from the battery negative to see if that fixes it, if it does then
the wire mesh ground from the engine to the firewall is likely toasted.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
ron wrote:
>
> The wipers stop as soon as the switch is turned off, not when they
> return to the bottom of the glass. I figured it was the switch and
> took the opertunity to upgrade to intermittent. Same problem with new
> switch. my only guess is maybe a bad sensor on the control motor or
> something like that?!?
lost the ground to the windshield or to the motor anyway.
When you shut it off, it sends power to a second line that has it's own
ground as well as a copper slide inside the motor. The motor turns
along the copper slide until it come to a gap, then it parks. If this
second circuit is missing power from a bad switch or the ground, then
when you turn the switch off, it stops the motor.
So basically when the motor is off, there is still one hot line coming
to it. This is the line with the trouble.
I would first run a booster cable to the windshield frame or wiper motor
case from the battery negative to see if that fixes it, if it does then
the wire mesh ground from the engine to the firewall is likely toasted.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
ron wrote:
>
> The wipers stop as soon as the switch is turned off, not when they
> return to the bottom of the glass. I figured it was the switch and
> took the opertunity to upgrade to intermittent. Same problem with new
> switch. my only guess is maybe a bad sensor on the control motor or
> something like that?!?
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