Thanks Blacky, I've just bought a NOS EK pump from ePay. We can do a swap if you like.
FB/EK Holden NASCO windshield washer enthusiasts guide
Re: FB/EK Holden NASCO windshield washer enthusiasts guide
Alan
Member No.1 of the FB EK Holden Car Club of WA (Woo-hoo sweet!)
Member No.1 of the FB EK Holden Car Club of WA (Woo-hoo sweet!)
Re: FB/EK Holden NASCO windshield washer enthusiasts guide
My offering - would appear to be not NASCO -but period correct from alternate parts supply house such as Motor Spares or the like
Resto
Resto
Re: FB/EK Holden NASCO windshield washer enthusiasts guide
Cool - thanks Resto!
327 Chev EK wagon, original EK ute for Number 1 Daughter, an FB sedan meth monster project and a BB/MD grey motored FED.
- Marty K Bird
- Posts: 249
- Joined: Tue Oct 02, 2012 5:01 am
- State: NOT ENTERED
- Location: Harden-Murrumburrah NSW
Re: FB/EK Holden NASCO windshield washer enthusiasts guide
Hi Harv! Awesome information .... I have one that i assume would have a blown diaphragm (who do you check?) and I have been thinking about an electric motor conversion for it.
Do you think it would be possible to drill out the connector at the bottom of the diaphragm bell and then run a rubber hose all the way from the top down into the bottom and then hide the electric pump somewhere?? Also would it maybe be possible to somehow use a vacuum switch on the lines going to the manifold and the little button on the washer knob so when you press the button the vacuum flicks the switch for the motor..... hope this makes sense.
Im not sure about vacuum switches .... is there some on cruise control setups?
Heres something that looks like it does the job
http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/MERCEDES-Vac ... 3f12b4df20
The end result being the bottle looks unchanged and the little button still works the washers??
Be great to hear your thoughts on this.
Marty~
Do you think it would be possible to drill out the connector at the bottom of the diaphragm bell and then run a rubber hose all the way from the top down into the bottom and then hide the electric pump somewhere?? Also would it maybe be possible to somehow use a vacuum switch on the lines going to the manifold and the little button on the washer knob so when you press the button the vacuum flicks the switch for the motor..... hope this makes sense.
Im not sure about vacuum switches .... is there some on cruise control setups?
Heres something that looks like it does the job
http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/MERCEDES-Vac ... 3f12b4df20
The end result being the bottle looks unchanged and the little button still works the washers??
Be great to hear your thoughts on this.
Marty~
Re: FB/EK Holden NASCO windshield washer enthusiasts guide
G'day Marty,
Quickest way to see if the diaphragm is blown is to put the vacuum canister end in your mouth, suck the air out of it then block the pipe end with your tongue (I know, I know... sounds somewhat crude). If it holds pressure the diaphragm is good. If the pressure bleeds out from under your tongue, the diaphragm is shot.
P35 of the Guide goes through an electric motor conversion that is designed to look original. It uses the earlier two-position switch (electrical actuation), but you can leave the vacuum button in place (this is what I did with mine).
Cheers,
Harv.
Quickest way to see if the diaphragm is blown is to put the vacuum canister end in your mouth, suck the air out of it then block the pipe end with your tongue (I know, I know... sounds somewhat crude). If it holds pressure the diaphragm is good. If the pressure bleeds out from under your tongue, the diaphragm is shot.
P35 of the Guide goes through an electric motor conversion that is designed to look original. It uses the earlier two-position switch (electrical actuation), but you can leave the vacuum button in place (this is what I did with mine).
Cheers,
Harv.
327 Chev EK wagon, original EK ute for Number 1 Daughter, an FB sedan meth monster project and a BB/MD grey motored FED.
- Marty K Bird
- Posts: 249
- Joined: Tue Oct 02, 2012 5:01 am
- State: NOT ENTERED
- Location: Harden-Murrumburrah NSW
Re: FB/EK Holden NASCO windshield washer enthusiasts guide
Hi Harv, will test the diaphragm later...Harv wrote:G'day Marty,
Quickest way to see if the diaphragm is blown is to put the vacuum canister end in your mouth, suck the air out of it then block the pipe end with your tongue (I know, I know... sounds somewhat crude). If it holds pressure the diaphragm is good. If the pressure bleeds out from under your tongue, the diaphragm is shot.
P35 of the Guide goes through an electric motor conversion that is designed to look original. It uses the earlier two-position switch (electrical actuation), but you can leave the vacuum button in place (this is what I did with mine).
Cheers,
Harv.
I did read your electric conversion, and i think its great and i see you also asked for suggestions .... thats what got my brain ticking...
I wonder if it might be easier to do as i was suggesting ... saves having to cut off the bell collar fitting and then carving up the bell, from any angle you wouldn't be able to tell it was converted. You also wouldn't have to worry about trying to hide the wires and could use an original looking bit of vacuum line. If the motor was placed behind the dash (I know not ideal) you wouldn't see it either. You also wouldn't have to have the 1st speed water squirt combo.
The water would be drawn through the top of the bell, and the side fitting could just be blanked off and hose added to run to the vacuum switch also behind the dash.
Does it sound feasible?
Re: FB/EK Holden NASCO windshield washer enthusiasts guide
G'day Marty,
You're probably right, it would be easier to mount the pump remotely, and just have the suction line running down into the glass jar. The only drama I've had is that the little washer motor pumps don't like sucking long distances, or pulling water uphill on the suction side (for the engineering freaks out there, the nett positive suction head required is substantive comparible to the pump dimensions ).
A check valve (non-return valve or foot valve) on the suction side would be requried, to keep the suction primed. Even with that in place, I don't know how far one of those little pumps will "suck". Maybe as a starting point run some rubber vacuum hose, hold the pump under the dash and see if it will suck that far.
Cheers,
Harv (chief windshield washer process engineer)
You're probably right, it would be easier to mount the pump remotely, and just have the suction line running down into the glass jar. The only drama I've had is that the little washer motor pumps don't like sucking long distances, or pulling water uphill on the suction side (for the engineering freaks out there, the nett positive suction head required is substantive comparible to the pump dimensions ).
A check valve (non-return valve or foot valve) on the suction side would be requried, to keep the suction primed. Even with that in place, I don't know how far one of those little pumps will "suck". Maybe as a starting point run some rubber vacuum hose, hold the pump under the dash and see if it will suck that far.
Cheers,
Harv (chief windshield washer process engineer)
327 Chev EK wagon, original EK ute for Number 1 Daughter, an FB sedan meth monster project and a BB/MD grey motored FED.