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Windshield wash flow


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I am having a problem with the pressure that come out of the nozzles.  What I have done already is take all the lines off and blew air through each of them individually.  All have air coming out them.  Took the nozzles off and hit them with air/clean them and got air flow through them.  I took the reservoir off and cleaned it out.  I put everything back together and I still get low pressure out of them.  Driver side gets some fluid out but it hits the low part of the windshield, but passenger side will not even hit the windshield.  Could my motors be going out?  Any help with this.  

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It can also clog at the nozzle. I've had to replace them because they wouldn't clear no matter what I did although more often its slime in the water tank. No idea how bacteria grows in that stuff.

 

 

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OK cleaned up the wires and scrubbed the prongs on the motors.  The pressure is still the same.  

 

^^ This. If no joy, pull the pump out of the reservoir and clean the pump's inlet filter.

 

If still no joy, it's pump replacement time. P/n 55154613

 

http://www.ebay.com/itm/WASHER-PUMP-MOPAR-55154613-/192247999012?epid=83228032&hash=item2cc2dfaa24:g:If0AAOSwkttZaM~7&vxp=mtr

 

Can anyone let me know how to take the motors off, I tried but was worrying about breaking them.

  

 

After those things, add a cup of white vinegar to the rezzy.

 

I will do that tomorrow.  

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One thing to think about is replacing/moving the reservoir. In preparation for installation of a double diaphragm brake booster, I picked up an XJ reservoir that mounts on the passenger firewall. It has two pumps, one for the windshield and one for the XJ rear hatch. I think it was from a 96. Buy a little hose and wire to reroute everything, bring the hose from the pump you don't use far enough up,that you can connect it to the hose to the sprayers and you have an installed spare pump.

Or, you could go Hornbrod's route and fit the reservoir in the fender. I believe it was also an XJ reservoir with dual pumps, but I could be wrong.

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One thing to think about is replacing/moving the reservoir. In preparation for installation of a double diaphragm brake booster, I picked up an XJ reservoir that mounts on the passenger firewall. It has two pumps, one for the windshield and one for the XJ rear hatch. I think it was from a 96. Buy a little hose and wire to reroute everything, bring the hose from the pump you don't use far enough up,that you can connect it to the hose to the sprayers and you have an installed spare pump.

Or, you could go Hornbrod's route and fit the reservoir in the fender. I believe it was also an XJ reservoir with dual pumps, but I could be wrong.

 

 

I have two reservoir and they both have the duel motors on them.  I just ran a hose and tee them together.  

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One thing to think about is replacing/moving the reservoir. In preparation for installation of a double diaphragm brake booster, I picked up an XJ reservoir that mounts on the passenger firewall. It has two pumps, one for the windshield and one for the XJ rear hatch. I think it was from a 96. Buy a little hose and wire to reroute everything, bring the hose from the pump you don't use far enough up,that you can connect it to the hose to the sprayers and you have an installed spare pump.

Or, you could go Hornbrod's route and fit the reservoir in the fender. I believe it was also an XJ reservoir with dual pumps, but I could be wrong.

Late 1991 up to 96 XJs have the reservoir on the pass side.  I swapped one in to my 91 XJ, also in preparation for a dual diaphragm booster swap that is yet to happen (parts on the shelf, gathering dust).  I did the late XJ inside-the fender-mount on my 91 MJ.  I recommend the later one, although it is slightly more work.  Much cleaner setup.

 

I've experienced similar lackluster sprayer performance on my CJ.  I've wondered if adding a relay to bring full voltage to the pump, similar to upgrading XJ/MJ headlight wiring, would make a difference.  

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If you use an XJ reservoir with two pumps, use a check valve when you tee them together (or just wire them both up). If you tee them but only have one pump wired it will back flush back into the reservoir without a check valve. I just ran into this issue when I added the 97+ fender reservoir to my MJ.

It'll barely hit the windshield when this happens.

 

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I did the 97 XJ fender tank mod a few years ago. Ran the wiring and hoses from both pumps to a convenient spot in the engine bay. The pump motor wires were on connectors, and the unused hose was capped off. So when the windshield pump craps out, you simply swap the power connectors and hoses and you're back in business w/o tearing into the fender well. You have a spare pump - might as well use it as a standby. Of course, this only works once. I already had one die so next time it's back inside the fender to replace both pumps...  :rotfl2:

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Meh, both pumps can be reached without removing the fender ... and they just press into the bushing.

I couldn't wire both mine in as the upper motor used a different style connector (same deal on my 2000 XJ, not sure why they did that). I've only had the lower pump die on my XJ, since new. But at least they aren't held in like the older pumps (the strainer screws onto the pump - inside the tank).

 

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Just the rear section, the front (from the apex forward) is trimmed away. Yeah, forgot about those doodads, easy enough to pull aside, I did have them on my XJ when my pump died though.

 

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I did the 97 XJ fender tank mod a few years ago. Ran the wiring and hoses from both pumps to a convenient spot in the engine bay. The pump motor wires were on connectors, and the unused hose was capped off. So when the windshield pump craps out, you simply swap the power connectors and hoses and you're back in business w/o tearing into the fender well. You have a spare pump - might as well use it as a standby. Of course, this only works once. I already had one die so next time it's back inside the fender to replace both pumps...  :rotfl2:

So what you your saying is that I should run only one pump, and cap Off the other? I'll try that next.

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I did the 97 XJ fender tank mod a few years ago. Ran the wiring and hoses from both pumps to a convenient spot in the engine bay. The pump motor wires were on connectors, and the unused hose was capped off. So when the windshield pump craps out, you simply swap the power connectors and hoses and you're back in business w/o tearing into the fender well. You have a spare pump - might as well use it as a standby. Of course, this only works once. I already had one die so next time it's back inside the fender to replace both pumps...  :rotfl2:

So what you your saying is that I should run only one pump, and cap Off the other? I'll try that next.

 

Yes. That's the way it is in the dual pump XJ tanks - the power and and output hoses are completely segregated.

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I did the 97 XJ fender tank mod a few years ago. Ran the wiring and hoses from both pumps to a convenient spot in the engine bay. The pump motor wires were on connectors, and the unused hose was capped off. So when the windshield pump craps out, you simply swap the power connectors and hoses and you're back in business w/o tearing into the fender well. You have a spare pump - might as well use it as a standby. Of course, this only works once. I already had one die so next time it's back inside the fender to replace both pumps...  :rotfl2:

 

So what you your saying is that I should run only one pump, and cap Off the other? I'll try that next.

 

Yes. That's the way it is in the dual pump XJ tanks - the power and and output hoses are completely segregated.

 

That was the problem. When I capped off one of the lines, it sprayed out no problem. Thanks for the tip

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