03 Accord Windshield Spray

Discussion in 'Accord' started by Andrew Tsen, Jan 28, 2005.

  1. Andrew Tsen

    Andrew Tsen Guest

    My accord seems to have problem with the windshield fluid.
    I can't seem to spray anything for the first 20-30 minutes
    of driving. I hear the gears moving from the pump, but
    nothing comes out of the nozzles.

    I made sure that there are no ice or liquid frozen at the
    tip of both nozzles. I can't find the hose easily when
    I pop the hood (thinking it's frozen). Looks like the
    hoses are embedded into the hood.

    Anyone else have this problem either with 03 or 04?

    My fiance's car, 99 Toyota Celica, is parked in the same
    area with the same condition and her car have no problem
    spraying the windshield liquid at startup.

    Sometimes, I can use the spray again after driving for
    a few hours. So it does indicate that something is
    freezing or stuck inside the tubes.
     
    Andrew Tsen, Jan 28, 2005
    #1
  2. Andrew Tsen

    TeGGer® Guest

    bar.com:



    Yes. It means the fluid is freezing in the nozzles. If you get a washcloth
    soaked in very warm water and let it sit on the nozzles for a minute,
    they'll probably unfreeze. Even your fingertips will do if they're warm.

    I don't know where you live, but you need to be using a low-temperature
    washer fluid (-35 or -40 fluid is common here).

    If you still have summer "bug wash" in there, it'll freeze very readily,
    even in the lines.
     
    TeGGer®, Jan 28, 2005
    #2
  3. Andrew Tsen

    motsco_ _ Guest

    --------------------------

    Even if you've got propper 'winter' fluid in the reservoir, there may
    still be regular water in the hoses. Once it warms up, run the squirters
    for a long time until you see the juice coming out BLUE.

    'Curly'
     
    motsco_ _, Jan 28, 2005
    #3
  4. Andrew Tsen

    SoCalMike Guest

    dumping a 99 cent bottle of rubbing alcohol in the reservoir will fix
    the problem.
     
    SoCalMike, Jan 28, 2005
    #4
  5. Andrew Tsen

    John Ings Guest

    It probably indicates you've got summertime washer fluid in the
    reservoir. Not enough alky in the mix to keep it from freezing.
    Try a winter grade.
     
    John Ings, Jan 28, 2005
    #5
  6. Andrew Tsen

    RWM Guest

    I'm finding the reservoir fluid not frozen and pump operating, but
    suspect the alcohol in the straight winter fluid has evaporated via the
    nozzles, leaving the water to freeze, so, no spray. Same fluid and same
    result on both '05 Honda and '98 Caravan.
     
    RWM, Jan 28, 2005
    #6
  7. Andrew Tsen

    Andrew Tsen Guest

    I do. I specifically go out and look for the winter windshield fluid.

    I swear I got all of those ice out when I was scraping and picking the snow.
    I'll try your suggestion next time when it freezes again.

    I m in Philly. We recently got hit with 10+ inches of snow.

    Thanks.
     
    Andrew Tsen, Jan 28, 2005
    #7
  8. Andrew Tsen

    TeGGer® Guest



    Lucky you. All we had was -20F.

    Occasionally the alcohol in the fluid in the nozzles can evaporate,
    especially if they're not used for a bit, leaving a tiny plug of water in
    the nozzles, which becomes ice. That's what you need to melt. It's entirely
    inside the nozzle, so regular scraping won't help.

    You can also get the tiny plug of water if the washers aren't used for a
    while, and some snow has melted then refrozen on top of the nozzles.
     
    TeGGer®, Jan 28, 2005
    #8
  9. Andrew Tsen

    SoCalMike Guest

    maybe you got a crappy batch? add a bottle of rubbing alcohol to it.
     
    SoCalMike, Jan 28, 2005
    #9
  10. Andrew Tsen

    Andrew Tsen Guest

    Will do. It just so happens I have some spare bottles in my medicine
    cabinet. THx.
     
    Andrew Tsen, Jan 30, 2005
    #10
Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments (here). After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.