Wiper blades
are like squeegees.
The arms of the wiper drag a thin rubber strip across the
windshield to clear away the water.
Did You Know?
Windshield wiper systems are designed to wipe 1.5 million times in their
lifetime!
When the blade is new, the rubber
is clean and has no nicks or cracks. It wipes the water away without leaving
streaks. When the wiper blades age, nicks or cracks form, road grime builds up
on the edge and it doesn't make as tight a seal against the window, so it leaves
streaks. Sometimes you can get a little extra life out of your wiper blade by
wiping the edge with a cloth soaked in window cleaner until no more dirt comes
off the blade.
This wiper blade is supported in six places for an even pressure
distribution against the
windshield.
Another key to streak-free operation is even pressure over
the length of the rubber blades. Wiper blades are designed to attach in a single
point in the middle, but a series of arms branch out from the middle like a
tree, so the blade is actually connected in six to eight places. If ice or snow forms on these
arms, it can make the distribution of pressure uneven, causing streaks under
part of the blade. Some wiper manufacturers make a special winter
blade with a rubber boot covering the arm assembly to keep snow and ice out.
Pivot Points Most cars
have pretty much the same wiper design: Two blades move together to clean the
windshield. One of the blades pivots from a point close to the driver's side of
the car, and the other blade pivots from near the middle of the windshield. This
is the Tandem System in the figure below. This design clears
most of the windshield that is in the driver's field of view.
There are a couple of other designs on some cars. Mercedes
uses a single wiper arm that extends and retracts as it sweeps across the window
-- Single Arm (Controlled) in the figure above. This design
also provides good coverage, but is more complicated than the standard
dual-wiper systems. Some cars use wiper blades that are mounted on opposite
sides of the windshield and move in the opposite direction, and some vehicles
have a single wiper mounted in the middle. These systems don't provide as much
coverage for the driver as the standard two-blade system.