1. Registration trouble? Please use the "Contact Us" link at the bottom right corner of the page and your issue will be resolved.
    Dismiss Notice

Vacuum or Electric Wipers?

Discussion in 'Early CJ5 and CJ6 Tech' started by Jack Frost, Dec 19, 2006.

  1. Jack Frost

    Jack Frost Member

    Looking for a windshield, and I know that since my CJ is a '61, the wipers should be on top (correct me if I'm wrong), but I was wondering whether to use vacuum or electric wipers, I'm thinking of going electric so I can have wipers without worrying about speed, etc. Ideas?
     
  2. 1960willyscj5

    1960willyscj5 Well-Known Member

    If you want to be period correct.. then the vacuum motors is what you want. If you want to see, get the electrics.

    I have the vacuums, leave a lot to be desired, especially looking for blades and arms. Plus one (drivers side) works and one is shot.

    I am going to get one electric, and put it where the drivers one is, that one I will move over and use on the passenger side. they are like 40 bucks apiece when you can find them. The vacuum ones are worth about a hundred bucks or so.:hurrican: :coffee:
     
  3. Boyink

    Boyink Super Moderator Staff Member

    Don't waste your $$ on those. They don't work worth a crap. Search the forums here, some better options were posted at one point.
     
  4. 1960willyscj5

    1960willyscj5 Well-Known Member

    Well, I'ld like to get the marine style ones , but I have no idea where to begin looking for them.R)
     
  5. w3srl

    w3srl All-around swell dude Staff Member

  6. willysworker

    willysworker Member

    the electric units work for rain, with lot's of rainX use included. Look at converting to CJ5 linkage type wipers for mud, and ad a defroster for winter snow and ice.
     
  7. WYOMIKE

    WYOMIKE Oct 1971 pic

    I don't understand things now a days. If you go out and buy a fancy car like a BMW or somthing, you pay extra for a set of windshield wipers that sense the speed of the car and automiaticly adjust the speed of the wipers to match the car speed. 50 years ago JEEP came out with the same thing with vacume wipers. You start up a hill and slow down and the wipers auto slow down, you reach the top and start down the hill and pick up speed and the wipers speed up. And all this was for free, no extra charge, just standard equipment. Seems like a no brainer to me on what to get.
    R) R) R) R)
     
  8. Vanguard

    Vanguard Take Off! Staff Member

    If you want to stick with the vacuum wipers, do a search. IIRC the binky page had a very good guide to rebuilding the vacuum wipers. My memory seems to indicate that the rebuild was mostly grease replacement and that there were very few or no parts to replace.
     
  9. 66cj5

    66cj5 Jeep with no name

    I used 1970 componets an have top mounted wipers with factory parts. they only mod besides drilling holes was to lengthen the long arm about 3/4". I just welded a 516" nut to one half and a matching 1" long bolt to the other piece. to get the arms and blades, I took the old arms/blades and the new pivots to flaps and played stump the counterman.
     
  10. Vanguard

    Vanguard Take Off! Staff Member

  11. willysworker

    willysworker Member

    "As I remember it", Vaseline was the preferred lube. You want to keep the leather swipe pliable and it will soak up some lube and swell a little. You also get a better seal between housing and leather as it sweeps back and forth. Cold weather thickens wheel bearing grease to much and you get drag. Like I said, as I remember it from back in the day when I rebuilt mine.
     
  12. wilson

    wilson Member

    I have never found any electric wipers that have enough travel to park out of the way. For this reason, I use a vacuum on the drivers side and a hand crank on the passenger.
     
  13. 1960willyscj5

    1960willyscj5 Well-Known Member

    Actually, being in Phoenix, where I can ride my Vstar 1100 all year round, Ice and Snow just doesn't seem to be much of an issue.:coffee:

    Unless of course you are talking about the Weathers twins from down the street aways...:rofl: :beer:
     
  14. wilson

    wilson Member

    I prefer the vacuum on the drivers side, hand crank on the passenger side. I haven't found any electric ones that have enough of an arc to allow them to park out of the way. They arent great performers but for the amount I use them it's OK.
     
  15. kiowamtp

    kiowamtp Member

    http://www.aeiokla.com/pc-84-4-wwf-wiper-motors.aspx

    I have two American Bosch that the PO had bought and never installed. I am not sure which model I have from the above link, but they work great. They bolt right in to the existing holes (at least the ones I had). Just another option.
     
  16. double R

    double R Member

    how did you wire these? i have the bosch wiper motors. i'm not sure if they were original or installed by PO. the wire colors on what i have don't seem to agree with any of the descriptions i've seen on the web. both are already wired together and i'm just trying to connect them to a switch that was never there when i purchased the jeep. the wires that were supposedly hooked up to a switch are 2 pnk/wht, 1 brown, and 1 blue. i haven't looked closely at how the PO wired the two motors together. where do those wires connect to on the switch? i just bought a 3 position switch with 4 terminals.
     
  17. jkoz79

    jkoz79 New Member

    This worked so good i was amazed. Just did the passenger side, and now cant wait to do the other one. Vaseline in a wiper motor, Couldnt believe it. Thanks for all the tips
     
  18. PeteL

    PeteL If it wasn't for physics, and law enforcement... 2024 Sponsor 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    Hand crank is the way to go.. move snow, mud, tree limbs, whatever.
     
  19. nickmil

    nickmil In mothballs.

    Until you have to steer, shift, and work the wipers at the same time;)

    There is a coolness factor of the vacuum or hand crank wipers though.