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quote:
What is the secret to removing the cable assembly from the wiper motor? It is attached with a nut threading onto the motor housing. Once the nut is removed, the cable assembly still does not want to come off.



On the picture you see the inside of the motor, the cable assembly/"push rod" is fixed by the lid/motor cover per 4 screws, and adjusted per the big nut at the end.
Not sure if you can take the MOTOR out and leave the cable/Push rod in place. I removed everything for overhaul.

What T. Solo is saying is probably the best. Get the Wiper arms off..per a small piece of wood used as lever. Then you can pull everything out motor incl the push rod/Cable assembly. The wiper studs stay in place. Same way to get it back in.

Pic 1

Wiper_Motor_3

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Last edited by George P

What type of metal are the wiper tubes made of?

It looked like copper to me so I was just going to polish it up, leave it bare, and polish it again whenever I decided it was time.

However, when removing the paint that was on it, the copper seemed to at least partially go with it as the finish turned silver.  Did I take off a copper coating on some other type of metal?

Anybody ever have the angled steel sleeve that sits behind the chrome nut rust to the wiper pivot?

Mine did on the driver's side and it isn't coming off.

I put PB blaster on it, pried, hit it with a hammer harder than I should have, twisted - to the point that I think I detached the pivot shaft from the base.

I hit it with some more PB blaster to let it sit overnight, but I may have to consider a cutoff wheel - which is not going to be fun given how thick that sleeve is.

I also had to destroy a wiper spacer to remove one that was galvanized in place.  I purchased a replacement through a vendor and in hindsight wish I had simply bought an appropriate diameter hollow aluminum rod on line and cut it to match the length and required angle.  That was what the vendor had done with the replacement piece that I was provided. Lesson learned

perryh posted:

Also, I discovered that you can by a complete wiper system here for less than $200 - that's a bargain in the land of Pantera parts.  (I think I found that on this forum in another wiper thread.)

https://www.s-v-c.co.uk/catego...r-systems-and-parts/

I replaced my complete system with this system, and it worked fine driving in the rain for about 8 hours on one day last summer. I specified a gear with 5 degrees more sweep, and it covers the windscreen nicely. I used my original tubes for the long flexible shaft to run in, rather than the ones supplied, because I couldn't bend them (they come straight in the kit) without compressing them too much. I also used the original spacers on the shafts that the windscreen wipers attach to, as the ones in the kit had the wrong angle on the bottom. 

Cheers, Tim.

I found a Lucas part number on the rubber lower sleeve.  Lucas calls it a bushing, sometimes abbreviating it as bush, and refers to it as a rear bushing.

The part number is 744983.  It seems these were used on some Jags and Lotuses (Loti?).  However, after looking at photos of the part online it looks like the ones on my car were modified either at the DeTomaso factory or by a previous owner to both change the angle and make them shorter.  The flat surface, perpendicular to the cylinder was not cut.  That is where the part number is.  The angled surface was cut - perhaps by a bandsaw.

Last edited by perryh

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