The wiper motor is located on right rear of engine, hood up. Remove old wiper and replace before tightening the bolts test their location to mount.
set motor in a vice hook up a good grond wire hook up a power wire to the pos side of where the wires attach then using a test lightyou can check rest of poles to see what is getting pthen using the power wire you can touch it to different poles to see what speeds are working note that bench testing a wiper motor ,tests with no load the wiper motor may appear to be good in this test,but not be good when installed with wiper blades attached and adding load to the motor From Willcox Corvette: The 68 Wiper motor is unlike any other Corvette Wiper motor and can be damaged if hooked up wrong. We have detailed instructions on how to bench test this motor on our web site. Here is the link: http://willcoxcorvette.com/repairandinstallhelp.php?hID=195
Blown fuse, bad relay, bad wiring or connection, burnt out wiper motor... could be any of those. Before you can fix it, you need to diagnose it. Check the fuses for power, test the relays for resistance. If you don't find your problem there, get a trim puller and remove the trim from the rear door. Disconnect the wiper motor. Check the wiring for power at the ends, then test the wiper motor for resistance. If the wiper motor shows no resistance, it needs to be replaced.
screen wash pump working fine but rear wiper wont work.
its easier to undo the motor and test that if that isn't working then it will more than likely be the resistor
Rear wiper blade will not turn but the motor will. Flip open the cap at the end of the blade, at the center of the wiper motor. Tighten the 10mm nut until you have achieved a snug fit. Test the rear wiper and it should now work. You just saved yourself a tip and money going to the dealer.
You need to start by disconnecting the wiper arm assembly from the splines on the wiper motor itself. Then you need to jog the motor, once, through its cycle until it stops at its "park" position. Turn off the key switch. Then reconnect the wiper arm assembly to the motor when the wiper blades are in the proper position on the windshield. Turn key back on, and test run the wiper motor to make sure the blades aren't going off the edges and that there is no binding. Adjust as needed. Reinstall all previously removed covers and cowling.
its in the fuse box next to the motor mount. facing the engine from the front, its on the left hand side in a black box. i belive its the one at the very rear, but you could test them to check which one is broken
To replace the wiper motor in a 2003 Saturn L200, you will likely need to access it through the firewall. First, disconnect the battery, then remove the wiper arms, cowl panel, and any other components obstructing access. Unbolt the old motor, disconnect the wiring harness, and install the new motor by reversing these steps. Be sure to test the wipers before reassembling everything.
Possible the motor, but before replacing it remove the wiper arms from the motor itself and then run the wipers, if motor works then check both sides right and Left of the arms rust builds inside making it impossible to move, clean it up and lubricate and test it to see if it works.
Unplug the electrical connection at the motor and test to see if it has power. If there isn't power at the connection, then find the cause of it.. could be a relay, a fuse, a switch, or a broken wire. After that, you supply power to the wiper motor (run the ground post to a good ground, supply power with a jumper wire or something like a Power Probe tool). If it doesn't function like it's supposed to, your wiper motor is bad.
the most conman problem on those are a bad ground. for a fast test, take a set of jumper cables and ground the wiper motor to the battery. if they run perfectly add a ground wire to the wiper motor. fixes 90 percent of wiper motors acting up and many that get replaced never needed to be.