I've noticed for some time now that the driver side window has been
rather slow to close and often showed hesitancy while moving up.
Lowering the window has never been the problem. Today I got to a point
where I could not close the window more than half way up after I entered
a parking garage. Naturally I could not leave the car parked that way,
so I left the garage immediately and headed home on the freeway. About
half way home I tried to close the window and to my surprise it did
slowly close. Now I'm afraid to touch the power button on that window
as I rather have it stuck in closed than in open position till I can get
it fixed.
I wonder how many of you have experienced this kind of power window
problem on this or other Honda models and if there is a common cause for
most of them that I myself could hopefully fix. I'm afraid that if I
take it to a Honda dealer or other shop they might charge me a new servo
kit when perhaps all that was needed was some cleaning and grease job.
I do have the official Honda service manual for this model but when I
looked at all the electric stuff there behind the door panel that I
could possibly screw up during the disassembly and reassembly, I am
pretty hesitant doing the job myself unless I hear some reassuring
experiences from you guys who've done the job yourself. I am also not
keen getting some special purpose tools just for a one-time job like
this.
Thanks for relating any experiences you might have about this subject,
Rudy
Michael Pardee - 27 Dec 2004 01:22 GMT
> I've noticed for some time now that the driver side window has been rather
> slow to close and often showed hesitancy while moving up. Lowering the
[quoted text clipped - 21 lines]
> Thanks for relating any experiences you might have about this subject,
> Rudy
IIRC, this is a common problem that is addressed by spraying the
weatherstrip channels with silicone lubricant spray.
Mike
R. P. - 27 Dec 2004 03:49 GMT
> IIRC, this is a common problem that is addressed by spraying the
> weatherstrip channels with silicone lubricant spray.
Would it be enough just to spray the channels that are visible without
removing the inside door panel? How come the other windows work fine?
Rudy
SoCalMike - 27 Dec 2004 05:33 GMT
> Would it be enough just to spray the channels that are visible
probably. wouldnt hurt.
> removing the inside door panel? How come the other windows work fine?
i think the window loosens and gets cockeyed in the channel enough to rub.
> Rudy
R. P. - 28 Dec 2004 02:09 GMT
>> Would it be enough just to spray the channels that are visible
>
> probably. wouldnt hurt.
I tried it and it indeed helped. I can now operate the window up and
down but I try to apply more of that silicon spray later.
Boy, I'm sure glad I posted my problem here first before I went to a
repair shop. It sure saved me a bundle!
Rudy
Howard - 27 Dec 2004 01:30 GMT
All you should need is some lubrication of the the front and/or rear window
track in the driver door. There isn't much you can screw up by just taking
the door panel (interior) off. Use a grease called Dielectric Grease. Also
check that the tracks are not loose or have moved as to cause a binding when
the window moves up or down.
If you don't feel confident in doing it yourself, bring it to a competetent
mechanic or dealer and tell them that is what you want done. If they won't
do what you ask, then bring it somewhere else. If they find somwthing else,
make sure you look at it and understand what they say is wrong before you
authorize it.
Howard
> I've noticed for some time now that the driver side window has been
> rather slow to close and often showed hesitancy while moving up.
[quoted text clipped - 23 lines]
> Thanks for relating any experiences you might have about this subject,
> Rudy
R. P. - 28 Dec 2004 02:04 GMT
> All you should need is some lubrication of the the front and/or rear
> window
> track in the driver door. There isn't much you can screw up by just
> taking
> the door panel (interior) off. Use a grease called Dielectric Grease.
Dielectric grease? That's used for electrical contact surfaces.
Rudy