I really don't know butt I do remember being absolutely amazed when Dad came
down to pick my up from my Grandmother's house while it was raining and his
windshield wipers didn't stall when we were going up a hill because his 52
Cadillac had electric wipers.
I am sure that most had switched by 55 though.
Yup, those were the days when you actually had to know how to drive, not
just herd it down the road. (LOL)
Do yo remember the tranmissions before the syncromesh came into common use?
If you had to shift down to low or compound you usually had to come to a
complete stop and, by doing that, you really did get bogged down in the mud
or had a Hell of a time trying to get going up the hill without rolling
backwards down it. (LOL)
The flor mounted shift lever in our 46 Chevy pickup had a throw of about 90
feet between gears. Speed shift? NOt in your lifetime. (LOL)
Cy, the Ancient okie....

   _____  

From: blindhandyman@yahoogroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Lenny McHugh
Sent: Monday, October 01, 2007 7:45 AM
To: blindhandyman@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] How is a windshield wiper made?



Cy,
I do agree. My dad had a 1953 Ford that still used the vacuum wiper system. 
I remember helping to replace the unit and vacuum lines.
I wonder when Ford converted to electric?
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Cy Selfridge" <HYPERLINK
"mailto:cselfridge%40sbcglobal.net"[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <HYPERLINK
"mailto:blindhandyman%40yahoogroups.com"[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, October 01, 2007 5:23 AM
Subject: RE: [BlindHandyMan] How is a windshield wiper made?

Hi folks,
I am sorry but I do not agree with a good part of the history in this
article. As memory serves me the windshield wipers on cars in the 30s and
40s were vacuum driven. When you accelerated the wipers would slow down
because (for whatever reason) the vacuum would be decreased. If you needed
to really get the windshield clean you needed to let up on the accelerator
thus increasing the vacuum and the wipers would go like the very Dickens.
Now, letting off the accelerator would, unfortunately, cause the headlight
to dramatically dim because the generator would not be spinning as fast.
When approaching some sort of mud hold in the dark one needed to reduce the
engine speed so the wipers could clear the mess and then push in the clutch
and gun it so you could see where to go. (LOL)
What I have said was true in most GM autos and trucks for sure.
Cy, the ancient Okie...

-----Original Message-----
From: HYPERLINK
"mailto:blindhandyman%40yahoogroups.com"[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:HYPERLINK
"mailto:blindhandyman%40yahoogroups.com"[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Ray Boyce
Sent: Thursday, October 04, 2007 4:00 AM
To: HYPERLINK
"mailto:blindhandyman%40yahoogroups.com"[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [BlindHandyMan] How is a windshield wiper made?

Background

Windshield wipers are used to clean the
windshield
of a car so that the driver has an
unobstructed
view of the road. A typical
wipe
angle for a passenger car is about 67 degrees. The blades are 12-30 in
(30-76 cm) long with lengths increasing in 2-in (5-cm) increments.

History

The history of the windshield
wiper
began with the invention of the automobile. Most transportation vehicles did
not have wipers. Horse-drawn carriages and trucks moved at slow speeds, and
glass was not needed to protect the driver or passengers or to act as a
windbreak.

The first windshield wipers were brushes. Inventor J. H. Apjohn came up with
a method of moving two brushes up and down on a vertical plate glass
windshield in 1903. In the same year, Mary Anderson devised a swinging arm
that swept rain off the windshield when the driver moved a lever located
inside the car. Anderson patented her invention of the mechanical windshield
wiper in 1905, and it became standard equipment by 1913. Electric motors
were not used yet to power automobile essentials or accessories, and
Anderson's device had a drawback.
Without another power source, a driver had to use one hand to move the
lever. The driver's other hand steered the car (with either a wheel or
steering
tiller)
and worked the stick-mounted gear shift and brake grips standing on the
floor of the car or outside the driver's side on the running board.

Rubber strips replaced brushes as the cleaning tools on wipers in 1905.
Unfortunately, the hazardous need for drivers to wipe windshields while
driving was not eliminated until 1917. The solution was to use an electric
motor to move a single wiper with a long rubber blade back and forth.
Hawaiian dentist Dr. Ormand Wall invented the automatic wiper by placing an
electric motor in the top center of the windshield so the wiper arced down
over the hood of the car in a semi-circular or rainbow shape. Wipers were
one of the first electrical devices in automobiles after the electric
starter was developed in 1912. Most wipers on cars before 1930 were paired
and hung down from the top of the windshield. They were moved to the base of
the windshield as electrical systems became more complicated.

Windshield washers were added to the wiper on/off levers, and these required
spray nozzles in front of the windshield, a tank for washer fluid in the
engine compartment, and electrical connections to coordinate these
operations. In 1962, Bob Kearns invented the intermittent wiper with
intervals and speeds that the driver could change. The advent of electronic
systems with fuses and circuit breakers to operate, regulate, and coordinate
electrical components expanded the possibilities for more diverse wipers.
Wipers were added to headlights in the 1980s, requiring connections between
the lighting and wiper systems. In the 1990s, microsensors were built into
windshields to detect rain on the windshield, activate the wipers, and
adjust speed and intermittent use for the amount of rain.

Raw Materials

The manufacturer purchases all of the parts from companies that specialize
in fabricating parts from aluminum and steel, rubber blades, plastic
bushings for the linkages, and the motors. Windshield wipers and windshield
wiper systems (with motors) are different assemblies; some manufacturers
make both, and others produce wipers only.

The connecting and drive links and the pivots that move the wipers are made
of galvanized steel. Galvanization is the process of applying zinc coating
to steel to protect it from corrosion.
Drive arms for boats and vehicles used in the marine industry are made of
stainless steel that resists damage from salt water. The wiper suspension
and claws are also galvanized steel. The galvanizing zinc coating is easier
to paint than uncoated steel. Steel is also the material in the small parts
of wipers, such as washers, screws, nuts, springs, and brackets.

The blade frame is made from aluminum. The blades are made of natural rubber
or synthetic compounds. Some rubber blades are composites of soft rubber on
the wiping edge (the squeegee
surface) and firm rubber that supports the wiping edge in the rest of the
blade.

Other materials that comprise parts of windshield wipers are rubber for
washers in the pivots and plastic bushings that line holes for connecting
parts of the linkage.
The wiper suspension is typically painted black. If the wiper manufacturer
also builds wiper systems, motors are purchased from subcontractors. The
motors are contained in steel housings and include permanent magnet motors
wound with copper wire. Each housing has connections for the electrical
wires that are part of the vehicle and wiring harnesses are furnished
specific to operating the wipers. Each motor also contains one or more
electronic circuits depending on the sophistication of the system that the
motor controls.

Design

Windshield wipers are designed and made to clear water from a windshield.
Most cars have two wipers on the windshield, and they may have one on the
rear
window and one on each
headlight.
The wiper parts visible from outside the car are the rubber blade, the wiper

arm holding the blade, a spring linkage, and parts of the wiper pivots. The
wiper itself has up to six parts called pressure points or claws that are
small arms under the wiper. The claws distribute pressure from the wiper
along
the back of the blade. This is described as a balance beam with a suspension

system, where the wiper is the beam and the claws are the suspension
components.
The claws keep the blade
flexed
against the windshield to distribute even pressure to clean the glass all
along the blade. More claws usually distribute the pressure better and are
suited
to large or highly curved windshields.

Although the rubber is the familiar part of the blade, the blade actually
includes a metal strip called a blade frame with a slot along the length of
the
frame and replacement holes in the frame. The replacement holes provide
access for replacing the rubber blade with a
refill.
The blade on its aluminum frame can also be changed as a unit.

The standard two windshield wipers are usually operated as a single-motor,
tandem scheme with one wiper on the driver's side and one positioned near
the
middle of the windshield that moves across the passenger's view. The wipers
are secured to pivots. A wiper and
pivot
are mounted on brackets at both ends of a long rod called the connecting
link, and, as the force from the motor pushes on the driver's end of the
connecting
link, it in turn moves the other wiper. The connecting link is attached to
another long rod called the drive link near the wiper motor. A slender
spring
linkage ties the pivot to the drive link to return the wiper to its resting
or park position,
hug
the wiper close to the windshield, and keep it attached to the car if the
links are damaged.

Between the motor and the drive link, a linkage system consisting of a cam
(another short rod) and pivot, a gear output shaft, and a worm gear controls
the force of the motor delivered to the drive arm. The worm gear slows the
speed of the motor while
multiplying
its
torque
(force). The gear allows a small motor to produce enough force to move the
blades across the glass. This description is based on using a single motor
to
drive both wipers. If one motor powers each wiper, more links are needed to
move the two wipers together in a so-called unitized motor system.

This multiplied force is required to accelerate the blades from being
stopped at both ends of their movement, to resist the friction of the rubber

against
the glass, to resist the friction of the rubber on dirt on the glass, and to

oppose wind pressure on the windshield.

The tandem scheme is the most common because the blades produce overlapping
cleared areas on the windshield with the greatest overlap in front of the
driver.
An opposed scheme with two blades begins with both blades on the windshield
toward the sides of the car, and the blades overlap as they both pivot
toward
the center of the windshield. A single wiper that swings in an arc from the
center of the windshield is also used. The single-arm controlled wiper is
the
most complex; as it sweeps over the glass, the wiper arm lengthens toward
the car sides and retracts again as it points straight up at the middle of
the
windshield. Each of the two wipers in the tandem and opposed operating
schemes and the one wiper in the single-wiper scheme make an arc with a
single radius
and so are called radial arm wipers. The single-arm-controll-ed wiper
produces a multiple-radius arc.

The electric motor, worm gear, gear shaft, cam, drive link, and pivots are
built into the
underside
of the dash. The connecting link and wiper pivots are located below the
windshield and behind the trim molding. Wipers called depressed wipers also
rest
behind the molding when they are not being used. Non-depressed wipers are
above the windshield trim molding even at rest and are visible from outside
the
car and from the passenger compartment. In the passenger compartment, the
wiper's on/off lever is usually attached to the steering column. When the
wipers
are turned on, an electronic circuit inside the wiper motor starts it. When
the wipers are turned off the circuit stops the power to the wiper motor.
Intermittent
operation of the wipers is basically short on-and-off periods for the wiper
motor that the circuit also regulates.

The Manufacturing
Process
1. Wiper manufacturers carry large stocks of materials provided by
subcontractors. As the materials are received, the receiving inspectors
confirm that
the types and quantities of parts are correct, compile an inventory, and
store the parts.
2. The worker begins by putting together the pivot shaft for each wiper. The

pivot shaft is made of a set of
fasteners
and spacers that hold the wiper arm securely while allowing it to pivot and
sweep the design wipe angle. The shaft assembly includes the pivot shaft
itself
and (from the end near the small connecting link to the tip of the shaft) a
rubber washer, metal washer, nut, nut cap, knurled driver, washer, and
acorn
nut. The knurled driver is a type of nut with ridges on the sides that grip
any attachment. The wiper arm will sit on the knurled driver, which keeps it
from shifting out of position on the shaft, and the washer and acorn nut
hold the arm on the shaft. The pivot shaft is then attached to the small
connecting
link with a washer and spring clip. A pin on the pivot shaft can be inserted

in any one of three pin positions when the shaft is attached to the link,
depending on the design for the pivot and link.
3. For a single-arm wiper scheme, a U-shaped, galvanized steel bracket is
fixed to the small connecting link on the only pivot shaft with two shaft
screws.
The other end of the bracket will be attached to the drive link later. For a

scheme with two wipers, the small connecting link for the wiper on the
passenger's
side is joined with a bracket to the end of the longer connecting link with
shaft screws. Similarly, a bracket is put on the small connecting link for
the driver's side wiper, and it is attached to the opposite end of the
longer connecting link. Later, this end will also be attached to the drive
link.
4. The drive link will be attached to the motor in the next step. The motor
with the worm gear reduction and other linkage is a stock item provided by a
vendor, and the wiper system manufacturer does not make any changes to it.
The drive link must be secured precisely on the cam (drive arm) on the end
of
the gear shaft so the wiper will sweep correctly but also so it can be
parked in the right position under the car molding. The connection between
the cam
and the drive link will be fixed by using another bracket called the mirror
bracket.
5. To set the angle between the drive link and the cam and motor, the motor,

cam, mirror bracket, and drive link are put inside a die set. The die set is
an outline-like pattern made of steel with areas fitted for the four parts.
Wiper system makers have a collection of die sets with various angles for
mounting
the drive link to the motor. The bracket is put on the drive link with a set

of screws. The bracket is then attached to the cam.
6. With the angle established, the cam is checked for fit with the drive
shaft. Spacer washers are added (if needed) between the cam and drive shaft,

and
the two are connected with a set of motor nuts and screws. For a
single-wiper scheme, the bracket with the single small link and pivot is
screwed on the
drive link. For a scheme with two wipers, the bracket on the end of the long

connecting link that also supports the driver's side pivot and small
connecting
link is fastened to the drive link.
7. In the final steps in assembling the windshield wiper system, linkages
made of springs are added to connect each pivot shaft to the drive link. The

wiper
arms and blades are connected to the pivots. The starter on the motor is
also moved into the park position, and the wipers are placed in their park
positions.
8. If the customer is purchasing windshield wiper systems, accessories may
be included. A system of washers with water bottles, tubing, and controls
for
the dash is the most common accessory set. A wiring
harness
with the washer controls and the other electrical connections for the wipers

is provided with the motor.
9. The completed windshield wipers are given a final quality control
inspection as described below and transferred to the packing area. Depending

on the
items ordered, each set consisting of wipers, a motor system, and
accessories is boxed with operating, maintenance, and return information.

The separate boxes are bundled together and packed in shipping cartons if
the customer ordered several items.

Quality Control

During assembly, the workers observe the conditions of the parts during
their work, but their only specific quality control activity is to check the

operation
of the motors by turning them on to make sure they start and by listening to

the sounds they make as indications of performance.

The last inspection is performed when the assemblies are complete and before

the wipers and systems are packed. The manufacturing director or final
quality
control inspectors look at the general appearance of the assemblies, confirm

that the wipers have been sized and angled correctly for their sweep, and
check that the assemblies are in the park position. The director or
inspectors also check to see that the correct accessories are ready to be
packed with
the assemblies.

Byproducts/Waste

Small quantities of steel and aluminum scraps from trimmings or rejected or
damaged parts are collected in bins and sold to
salvage
dealers who, in turn, sell them to metal manufacturers who melt the scrap
down for
recycling.
Packaging from received parts is also collected and recycled.

The Future

As of 2002, windshield wipers and wiper systems are evolving because of
changes in automobiles and other vehicles, technical improvements, and
consumer
demand. Wiper blades are as much as 30 in (76 cm) long, creating more
resistance as they clean the windshield. Night-vision screens for
windshields are
in development, and these also increase resistance and change the dimensions

needed for wipers. Blades are being improved with increasingly flexible
rubber,
so-called "boots" that fit around the blades to keep out ice and snow, and
nonstick coatings on the squeegee edges of the blades to keep oil and wax
from
adhering and aging them.

Motor systems are also being increased in voltage to power longer wipers and

more accessories. Engineers are investigating fully automated systems that
do not require any actions by drivers to start and stop wiper systems.
Inventors expect the capabilities of the rain-detecting sensors available in

the
late 1990s to
widen
to prompt the wipers to clean dirty windshields with no rain, for example.
Windshield wipers are among most reliable automotive devices-the design life
of a wiper system is 1.5 million wipes.

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