1951 200 Vacuum Wiper Motor
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Should the vacuum wiper motor hold a vacuum when off?
Posted on: 2023/4/28 7:39
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Re: 1951 200 Vacuum Wiper Motor
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There is no vacuum chamber on the wiper motor so the short answer is no, it does not hold vacuum without the engine running.
Posted on: 2023/4/28 14:12
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Re: 1951 200 Vacuum Wiper Motor
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In my car, i found the connection to the washer motor didn't fully close/leaked. I capped that off with one of those little rubber caps, and I got a lot better vacuum overall.
Posted on: 2023/4/28 14:46
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Re: 1951 200 Vacuum Wiper Motor
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Forum Ambassador
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A cap is a good solution for motors without washers attached but if you need the port active the most likely reason for a leak only at the washer hose port is the wire cable working the slide valve is slightly mis adjusted.
For general leaks around or in the valve, the moving plastic portion of the slide valve has a flat spring under the sheet metal retainer which is supposed to keep it pushed tight to the machined slide surface on the pot metal motor cover. It is possible that spring is weak or since the sliding part of the valve is plastic, that could have warped. The machined surface on the valve or cover could be dirty or scratched too. Any of those old motors could have dried out or just be tired and worn. A good many are probably long past due for a rebuild.
Posted on: 2023/4/28 15:31
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Howard
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Re: 1951 200 Vacuum Wiper Motor
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I will reformulate my question. If I use a manual vacuum pump at the vacuum hose connection should the wiper motor hold vacuum when the operating valve is closed? Come to think of it, if I substitute a vacuum gauge for the wiper motor, what should the vacuum be at idle? If I disconnect the vacuum line below the carburetor and connect the vacuum gauge I'm getting about 17.5 at slightly below 400 RPM curb idle. I'd think the vacuum at the wiper motor should be significantly higher.
Posted on: 2023/4/29 8:48
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Re: 1951 200 Vacuum Wiper Motor
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Forum Ambassador
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Not really. The wiper motor is almost always working off manifold vacuum so what a gauge says at the manifold will almost always be what is read at the wiper motor. There may be a small contribution from the vacuum pump but unless manifold vacuum is abnormally low that is not the usual case.
On cars with vacuum wipers made prior to 55 the vacuum source starts at the manifold, goes to the top or vacuum section of fuel pump, thru pump, and on to wiper motor. Since the valve springs in the pump are relatively weak and manifold vacuum and flow volume is almost all the time greater than what can be produced by the pump, when you turn on the wiper motor the larger flow of the manifold vacuum just holds the valve springs open and pump simply becomes a flow thru portion of the line. When engine is under a large load or the throttle is almost fully open the manifold vacuum and volume drops to a point low enough the springs in the pump can start working to close the valves in the pump. The pump then starts to work and becomes the stronger source to supply a limited amount of vacuum to the motor. While the strength may be similar to what is produced by the manifold, the volume is considerably lower. The pump is able to keep the motor running but without the volume, cannot keep it running at anything much more than slow speed. Typically is is just enough to keep the wipers from stopping completely. A typical manual hand pump such as the Mityvac may be strong enough but not have the volume to work the motor -- and that is assuming there are no leaks. You should be able to see motor move slightly but it will probably take many squeezes to make it move an appreciable amount.
Posted on: 2023/4/29 9:37
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Howard
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Re: 1951 200 Vacuum Wiper Motor
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I guess I should try to better describe what I'm doing.
I've had the motor apart and I've seen how it works. I'm not trying to operate the motor with the manual pump. I wanted to see if it was leaking. It is. I just now tested the vacuum at the hose to the motor and I was surprised to see that it was about the same on average while oscillating +/- about 1 lb.
Posted on: 2023/4/29 10:18
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