I bought a used 2005 Toyota Celica a couple of months ago. The resting
position of the rear window wiper is more or less vertical and towards
the left side of the window if you are looking at the car from the rear.
This seems strange to me; I think it would look better if it were
horizontal (i.e., resting at the bottom of the window). I've taken
apart the hardware that holds the wiper mechanism (located on the inside
of the rear hatchback) but do not see anything obvious that would let me
reverse the motion of the wiper (i.e., to go up and down rather than
down and up).
So, I guess my first question is whether the wiper really is supposed to
rest vertically. My second question is whether there is something I can
do to make it rest horizontally at the bottom of the window and to
reverse the motion.
Thanks.
ChrisCoaster - 06 Mar 2007 17:03 GMT
> I bought a used 2005 Toyota Celica a couple of months ago. The resting
> position of the rear window wiper is more or less vertical and towards
[quoted text clipped - 13 lines]
>
> Thanks.
_____________________
Just my 2c from a design perspective - is the Celica rear window
"raked"(as in: not vertical like an SUV's)? If it is slanted like a
conventional sedan's, the rear wiper rests up probably to prevent
water and snow from damming up especially while the car is in motion.
On the back of an Explorer, where the window is nearly vertical, it
doesn't matter all that much if it rest up or down.
Richard Catrambone - 06 Mar 2007 20:02 GMT
...
>>So, I guess my first question is whether the wiper really is supposed to
>>rest vertically. My second question is whether there is something I can
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
> On the back of an Explorer, where the window is nearly vertical, it
> doesn't matter all that much if it rest up or down.
It is raked/slanted. That's a good point, but the front window is
slanted too, so why is that not a problem in the front? I guess the
front has a "well" that allows stuff to flow away? I'll have to go
outside and check... Meanwhile, is it the case with other cars with
slanted rear windows that the wiper resting position is vertical?
Tegger - 06 Mar 2007 22:24 GMT
Richard Catrambone <rc7@prism.gatech.edu> wrote in news:BNjHh.9738$Jl.6091
@newsread3.news.pas.earthlink.net:
Meanwhile, is it the case with other cars with
> slanted rear windows that the wiper resting position is vertical?
Mine is.
('91 Integra.)

Signature
Tegger
Bob M. - 07 Mar 2007 05:24 GMT
> ...
>>>
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
> check... Meanwhile, is it the case with other cars with slanted rear
> windows that the wiper resting position is vertical?
The water & snow won't dam up on the windshield because they're being blown
away when the car moves. And yes, some other cars with angled rear windows
do have wipers that park vertically.
Richard Catrambone - 08 Mar 2007 04:15 GMT
> The water & snow won't dam up on the windshield because they're being
> blown away when the car moves. And yes, some other cars with angled
> rear windows do have wipers that park vertically.
Thanks for all the responses. Okay, I'm convinced it is supposed to be
vertical.
AZ Nomad - 06 Mar 2007 21:44 GMT
>I bought a used 2005 Toyota Celica a couple of months ago. The resting
>position of the rear window wiper is more or less vertical and towards
>the left side of the window if you are looking at the car from the rear.
>This seems strange to me; I think it would look better if it were
>horizontal (i.e., resting at the bottom of the window). I've taken
>apart the hardware that holds the wiper mechanism (located on the inside
>of the rear hatchback) but do not see anything obvious that would let me
>reverse the motion of the wiper (i.e., to go up and down rather than
>down and up).
>So, I guess my first question is whether the wiper really is supposed to
>rest vertically. My second question is whether there is something I can
>do to make it rest horizontally at the bottom of the window and to
>reverse the motion.
Toyota's engineers probably thought the rear view was less obstructed by
the wiper when it was sitting vertically.