Windshield wiper/washer issues

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

jwgreen

Member
Joined
Dec 26, 2016
Posts
46
Reaction score
13
Location
Texas
First Name
Justin
Truck Year
1984
Truck Model
C2500
Engine Size
5.7L V8
Hey guys,

Trying to figure out a little washer/wiper issue. So I have a 84 GMC with pulse wipers and washer. The wipers seem to work fine until I try to use the washer. When I press the squirt lever the pump just clicks and then the wipers stop working. Then the wiper will not start working again for some time, just random it seems. The wiper motor / washer motor I have has 3 plugs going into it. A 3 wire connector on the wiper motor, a wide 2 prong connector with a yellow and a light red wire and then another smaller 2 prong connector with what appears to be a grey or tan wire and a black wire. I can't seem to find a wiring diagram with this connector setup anywhere. I've checked and I'm getting 12v with the ign on to the yellow wire and about 2 amps on the light red wire at all times somehow. Anyone got any ideas or diagrams I can try or look at??
You must be registered for see images
 

Attachments

  • IMG_4007%201.jpg
    IMG_4007%201.jpg
    116.2 KB · Views: 330
Last edited:

Snoots

Full Access Member
Joined
Jan 23, 2013
Posts
8,192
Reaction score
16,055
Location
Georgia
First Name
Roger
Truck Year
1973
Truck Model
Jimmy Sierra
Engine Size
350
This may shed some light . . .

You must be registered for see images attach
 

Attachments

  • Detailed Wiper Wiring Diagram.doc
    263.4 KB · Views: 903

jwgreen

Member
Joined
Dec 26, 2016
Posts
46
Reaction score
13
Location
Texas
First Name
Justin
Truck Year
1984
Truck Model
C2500
Engine Size
5.7L V8
Thanks Snoots I'll give the info a look over and see what I can figure out.
 

jwgreen

Member
Joined
Dec 26, 2016
Posts
46
Reaction score
13
Location
Texas
First Name
Justin
Truck Year
1984
Truck Model
C2500
Engine Size
5.7L V8
So I went and checked all the grounds and wiring according to Snoots post and all seem good. But this problem is still there intermittently so I'm guessing its going to be the module. Guess I'll order one and see if it totally fixes the problem. If not then I'm thinking maybe the washer pump may be bad???
 

jwgreen

Member
Joined
Dec 26, 2016
Posts
46
Reaction score
13
Location
Texas
First Name
Justin
Truck Year
1984
Truck Model
C2500
Engine Size
5.7L V8
So after more searching and testing it seems that maybe the ground in the column mounted switch is not as good as it should be. If I turn on the wipers and jump a wire from the ground wire on the motor to a known good ground point the wipers work more reliably and a little faster.

Question is, can I just leave that jumper ground hooked up semi-permanently until I have time to tear the column apart and replace the switch??
 

PrairieDrifter

Full Access Member
Joined
Dec 28, 2014
Posts
3,472
Reaction score
4,600
Location
North Dakota
First Name
Mason
Truck Year
84,79,77,70,48
Truck Model
Suburban k10, bonanza k10, c30 C&C, c10, gmc 1/2ton
Engine Size
350, 350, 350, 350, 350
I would almost bet it’s the pulse module. My wipers didn’t function when hitting the washer function or in any intermittent speeds, but worked on low and high. I’m 99% sure my pump is shot so I got an aftermarket pump and connected the leads for it to the original washer pump harness, so then I had washer fluid working on the multifunction switch but still no wipers working when hitting wash function, or intermittent.

I replaced the module and the system started working perfectly. I got mine off of summit for an 84 k10 for like 50 or 60 dollars.

I would do some more testing if you don’t want to spend that money, possibly for nothin. My problem was permanent pretty much, yours is intermittent, so you could just have a loose connection somewhere.

Get some other opinions as well.
 

jwgreen

Member
Joined
Dec 26, 2016
Posts
46
Reaction score
13
Location
Texas
First Name
Justin
Truck Year
1984
Truck Model
C2500
Engine Size
5.7L V8
I would almost bet it’s the pulse module. My wipers didn’t function when hitting the washer function or in any intermittent speeds, but worked on low and high. I’m 99% sure my pump is shot so I got an aftermarket pump and connected the leads for it to the original washer pump harness, so then I had washer fluid working on the multifunction switch but still no wipers working when hitting wash function, or intermittent.

I replaced the module and the system started working perfectly. I got mine off of summit for an 84 k10 for like 50 or 60 dollars.

I would do some more testing if you don’t want to spend that money, possibly for nothin. My problem was permanent pretty much, yours is intermittent, so you could just have a loose connection somewhere.

Get some other opinions as well.

I went ahead and got a module, but it didn't fix anything. Wipers are still intermittent but better and still a bit weak/slow but if I jump the ground they work a bit better.
 

jwgreen

Member
Joined
Dec 26, 2016
Posts
46
Reaction score
13
Location
Texas
First Name
Justin
Truck Year
1984
Truck Model
C2500
Engine Size
5.7L V8
Ok guys, so I replaced the module, replaced the switch in the steering column but still have a the slow/weak wiper situation. I still get a much better result when I jump the ground/purple at the motor to an additional ground. I've tested the all wires and I'm not getting any reading above .4ohms and I'm getting a full 12v at the motor. Any more suggestions?
 

bucket

Super Moderator
Staff member
Super Moderator
Joined
Aug 3, 2010
Posts
29,126
Reaction score
24,036
Location
Usually not in Ohio
First Name
Andy
Truck Year
'77, '78, '79, '84, '88
Truck Model
K5 thru K30
Engine Size
350-454
The popping/ticking you hear is more than likely the washer pump mechanism malfunctioning. It's very common. It may also be binding and causing the weak wiper motor to stop working.

On my '84, I got a wiper motor for an '85-up that used a remote mount pump. Of the two 2-wire connectors, the larger one is for the washer pump. You can use those wires to power a universal electric pump, or to power an in-tank pump if you switch to the '85-up washer bottle.
 

chengny

Full Access Member
Joined
Feb 22, 2012
Posts
4,086
Reaction score
1,008
Location
NH
First Name
Jerry
Truck Year
1986
Truck Model
K3500
Engine Size
350/5.7
Ok guys, so I replaced the module, replaced the switch in the steering column but still have a the slow/weak wiper situation. I still get a much better result when I jump the ground/purple at the motor to an additional ground. I've tested the all wires and I'm not getting any reading above .4ohms and I'm getting a full 12v at the motor. Any more suggestions?

You probably know all this, but anyway:

There is no single ground lead for the wiper motor - the high and low speed windings are connected to their associated brushes. Each of those brushes is ultimately connected to ground via the control switch. The position of the control switch determines which of these brushes is grounded (or neither). When you ground the PPL lead you are running the motor on the high speed windings. So it will probably appear that performance improves - or at least compared to low speed operation.

In addition to the HI/LO speed brushes there is another brush that feeds the other side of both sets of windings. They call that the common brush. The common brush is always supplied with battery voltage - whenever the key is in RUN/ACC. Moving the control switch to LO connects the low speed brush to ground. When set to HI, the low speed ground path is opened and the high speed brush is grounded.

You must be registered for see images attach



So if both speeds seem to be running slower than expected, it would probably either a worn common brush or a poor ground path - from the switch to the common ground bus block. If only one or the other speeds was slow, that might point towards a single worn brush.

You're getting good readings on both the HI/LO speed (PPL/GRY) ground legs as well as full battery voltage to the common brush. But - and this is where I get confused - you see a marked improvement:

when I jump the ground/purple at the motor to an additional ground.

That's running on high speed.

What if you ground the gray lead and run the motor on the low speed windings? Does that get better results than grounding through the switch as normal operation?

If you have 12 V on the WHT, good continuity on both ground legs and a new switch/module...and your motor speeds up noticeably when the brushes are grounded to a nearby spot on the body, IDK. Maybe try cutting into the ground wire that runs from the control switch to the common bus block and running a jumper straight to the bus block:

You must be registered for see images attach
You must be registered for see images attach
 

Forum statistics

Threads
42,177
Posts
910,748
Members
33,673
Latest member
jcuriel512
Top