Washer motor. AGAIN
#1 Washer motor. AGAIN
It would seem I need yet another washer motor assembly.
Firstly mine is the later S1 4.2 plastic jobbie.
I can only find a replacement which includes the bottle and bulkhead bracket etc, neither of which I need.
This little lot comes to over £180. Unbelievable
Does anyone know if I can buy just the motor assembly anywhere??
Firstly mine is the later S1 4.2 plastic jobbie.
I can only find a replacement which includes the bottle and bulkhead bracket etc, neither of which I need.
This little lot comes to over £180. Unbelievable
Does anyone know if I can buy just the motor assembly anywhere??
S1 4.2 Roadster in Resale Red
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#2 Re: Washer motor. AGAIN
Hi, can you add your name to your signature, please? It’s much more polite to use your name when responding.
I have successfully taken the motor to bits, cleaned it and reassembled to get a good washer motor. Just be careful not to lose bits. There are generic washer motors out there, they’ll not look like the original but will do a fine job for much less. Fleabay has them.
Geoff
I have successfully taken the motor to bits, cleaned it and reassembled to get a good washer motor. Just be careful not to lose bits. There are generic washer motors out there, they’ll not look like the original but will do a fine job for much less. Fleabay has them.
Geoff
S2 FHC Light Blue
S2 OTS LHD - RHD full restoration
S2 OTS LHD - RHD full restoration
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#3 Re: Washer motor. AGAIN
Thanks Geoff
I’ve stripped it and it would appear the plastic/rubber impeller has melted for some reason. Maybe run dry.
I know there are generic motors but wanted to keep it looking original if possible
Lee
I’ve stripped it and it would appear the plastic/rubber impeller has melted for some reason. Maybe run dry.
I know there are generic motors but wanted to keep it looking original if possible
Lee
S1 4.2 Roadster in Resale Red
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#4 Re: Washer motor. AGAIN
Danny
1962 S1 3.8 FHC (1012/1798)
2015 Range Rover Sport SVR
"Experience is something you don't get until just after you need it."
1962 S1 3.8 FHC (1012/1798)
2015 Range Rover Sport SVR
"Experience is something you don't get until just after you need it."
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#5 Re: Washer motor. AGAIN
Is the pump actually visible with the plastic 4.2 version ?
I ask simply because I would challenge anyone to spot that my glass 3.8 type no longer uses the original pump.
I use a Mini pump fitted just above and behind the glove box, sucking through the original tube and foot, such that - I think - it is impossible to know that the original is no longer present.
It just requires dummy wiring to the old connectors, and a bit of harness tweaking under the dash.
Cheap, cheerful, invisible.
Will look for pictures if anyone is interested.
I ask simply because I would challenge anyone to spot that my glass 3.8 type no longer uses the original pump.
I use a Mini pump fitted just above and behind the glove box, sucking through the original tube and foot, such that - I think - it is impossible to know that the original is no longer present.
It just requires dummy wiring to the old connectors, and a bit of harness tweaking under the dash.
Cheap, cheerful, invisible.
Will look for pictures if anyone is interested.
Rory
3.8 OTS S1 Opalescent Silver Grey - built May 28th 1962
3.8 OTS S1 Opalescent Silver Grey - built May 28th 1962
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#6 Re: Washer motor. AGAIN
I recall reading an article, a good few years ago, where somebody retrofitted a modern generic pump inside the standard Lucas motor housing. I think it was the Jaguar Enthusiast magazine.
It gave a good spray of water, rather than the reluctant dribble the standard set up gives.
Regards
It gave a good spray of water, rather than the reluctant dribble the standard set up gives.
Regards
Stuart
If you can't make it work, make it complicated!
'62 FHC - Nearing completion
'69 Daimler 420 Sovereign
'78 Land Rover Series 3 109
If you can't make it work, make it complicated!
'62 FHC - Nearing completion
'69 Daimler 420 Sovereign
'78 Land Rover Series 3 109
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#7 Re: Washer motor. AGAIN
Don't forget to fit a non return valve. If not, the pump has to prime every time you use the washers and it will fail early.
Angus 67 FHC 1E33656
61 OTS 875047
61 OTS 875047
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#8 Re: Washer motor. AGAIN
The only nifty bit is soft-soldering a take-off onto the brass tube at the top, and connecting it to the original delivery port.
I sourced mine here.
https://www.minispares.com/product/Clas ... o%20search
Rory
3.8 OTS S1 Opalescent Silver Grey - built May 28th 1962
3.8 OTS S1 Opalescent Silver Grey - built May 28th 1962
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#9 Re: Washer motor. AGAIN
I installed a 12v submersible pump in mine - check this old post and the thread:
viewtopic.php?f=3&t=16614&p=137823&hili ... or#p137070
If you are fairly handy, this would be easy enough to do (even without 3D printed parts). The result is significantly improved flow, quieter operation, and no external visual clue that anything is non standard. There are various very cheap submersible pumps available on Ebay and elsewhere, all of which would do the job, with a bit of ingenuity. I had a look at putting a motor inside the existing housing, but decided a submersible pump was an easier route.
I did supply a kit to another member - hopefully it's still working...
viewtopic.php?f=3&t=16614&p=137823&hili ... or#p137070
If you are fairly handy, this would be easy enough to do (even without 3D printed parts). The result is significantly improved flow, quieter operation, and no external visual clue that anything is non standard. There are various very cheap submersible pumps available on Ebay and elsewhere, all of which would do the job, with a bit of ingenuity. I had a look at putting a motor inside the existing housing, but decided a submersible pump was an easier route.
I did supply a kit to another member - hopefully it's still working...
Richard
- 1969 Series 2 OTS, family owned 40+ years
- 1969 Series 2 OTS, family owned 40+ years
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#10 Re: Washer motor. AGAIN
This is what I’m going to do I thinkSeries1 Stu wrote: ↑Fri Oct 27, 2023 9:27 amI recall reading an article, a good few years ago, where somebody retrofitted a modern generic pump inside the standard Lucas motor housing. I think it was the Jaguar Enthusiast magazine.
It gave a good spray of water, rather than the reluctant dribble the standard set up gives.
Regards
S1 4.2 Roadster in Resale Red
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#11 Re: Washer motor. AGAIN
Yes great idea
S1 4.2 Roadster in Resale Red
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#12 Re: Washer motor. AGAIN
Monkeyfinger wrote: ↑Fri Oct 27, 2023 10:53 amI installed a 12v submersible pump in mine - check this old post and the thread:
viewtopic.php?f=3&t=16614&p=137823&hili ... or#p137070
If you are fairly handy, this would be easy enough to do (even without 3D printed parts). The result is significantly improved flow, quieter operation, and no external visual clue that anything is non standard. There are various very cheap submersible pumps available on Ebay and elsewhere, all of which would do the job, with a bit of ingenuity. I had a look at putting a motor inside the existing housing, but decided a submersible pump was an easier route.
I did supply a kit to another member - hopefully it's still working...
Thanks. I was looking for submersible pumps earlier.
S1 4.2 Roadster in Resale Red
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#13 Re: Washer motor. AGAIN
I too removed my old faulty motor from my 1968 S1.5 and removed the associated bottle inlet pipe,i kept the motor housing with its wiring connectors and put a small submersible pump in, from the outside no one can really tell and it cost only a few pounds and works well
David
1968 S1.5 OTS, ex USA converted to RHD
1968 S1.5 OTS, ex USA converted to RHD
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