IMPORTANT NOTICE: We are not experts or professionals in any field. Any advice or information found on this website should not be considered as 100% accurate and is provided on an AS-IS basis. Use any information you find here at your own risk. Click here and carefully read and agree to the DISCLAIMER statements before using any information found on this website.
Window Motor Replacement Instructions
Written by Dave Terry - AACA Reatta Forum
Saturday, 07 June 2008
- Start by fixing the
window in the UP position if possible so it won’t fall when the regulator is removed. I used
a strip of duct tape on the outside at the bottom of the window. Worked
fine.
- Remove door panel – obviously. (Click here for instructions.) Not having the proper
tool, I used a flat pry bar. Locate the pins that plug into the door
and get the bar under the pins at these locations. There are two at the
top that are reversed. The two pins at the top are attached to the door
and plug into the panel.
- Remove the moisture barrier – the
plastic sheet glued to the door. I pulled it loose at the sides and
bottom and rolled it up to the top and held it in place with clothes
pins. The foam sound damper I removed.
- Remove the speakers.
- Disconnect the electrical connector on the front of the window motor ; pulls straight out.
-
To remove the motor/sector assembly, punch out the steel rivet centers,
then a ¼” drill bit carves the aluminum rivets right out. There are 4
in a square pattern and one up to the left at the end of the motor,
about a foot away. You’ll see when you get there.
- Remove the lower roller track. One screw on the left and two on the right.
-
Lift the motor/sector and remove the rollers from the upper track. This
is the track on the bottom of the window itself, and takes a little
finesse. Then the entire assembly can be worked out through the hole
where the lower track was removed.
- I drilled a ¼” hole through
the regulator and housing and secured it with a bolt through both.
STEP #9
IS THE MOST IMPORTANT STEP IN THE PROCESS!
THERE IS A BIG SPRING ON THE
REGULATOR GEAR THAT WILL REMOVE BODY PARTS (YOURS), AND IT ABSOLUTELY
MUST BE FASTENED.
- Drill out the three rivets and the motor
falls off. Attach the new motor with 1/8” (I think) rivets. Easy
enough, so far.
Now comes the hard part:
- Work the
motor/regulator assembly into place with the rollers on the window
track. Now it gets a little dicey, and you’ll need a helper. The window
must be moved down until the motor holes line up with the door shell
holes. Or the motor must be actuated until the same occurs. I chose to
have a helper position the window. Not having ¼” rivet capability, I
used ¼” bolts, ½” long with lock washers. These are easy enough except
for the one in the lower left of the main 4. It was darn near
impossible to get to the back side. I finally had to grind about 1/8”
off the end to get it into the hole from the rear. It seemed even more
impossible (degrees of impossibility?) to get the nut into position on
the inside. It may be easier to fit it to the hole before putting the
assembly back in – I don’t know – at that point I wasn’t about to take
everything apart and start over. Anyway it was a real pain. I spent
almost as much time getting that one bolt in as I did on the entire
remainder of the job. Be forewarned.
- White lithium grease in a
spray can lubes the metal parts; teeth, gears, etc. Avoid getting it on the glass if
you can, it’s really tough to clean off. Had to use mineral spirits for cleanup. I used silicone lubricant on the channels.
-
The rest is just a matter of reassembly of moisture barrier and door
panel. Rubber cement works well to reattach both the moisture barrier
and the sound damper. Duct tape on the holes and the places where it
doesn’t fit right. The tape won’t show with the panel back in place.
-
Be careful that the pins are properly aligned when re-installing the
door panel…they will break…and they aren’t readily available. (Next
time you’re at your local junk yard, find a Riviera – more available
than Reattas – and collect all you can pick up.) If any of the plastic
holders on the panel are broken – and I suspect that there will be –
you can fabricate a replacement from sheet metal and epoxy them in
place. Works well. Four of mine had previously been broken when I
bought the car (both doors), and the panels weren’t real secure. They
fit fine now.
But I ramble…sorry. It’s not as simple as I
thought it would be, but it’s not too difficult. And a heckuva lot
cheaper than having a dealer do a shoddy job of it, and probably break
something else in the process.
BE DAMN SURE NOT TO REMOVE THE
MOTOR FROM THE ASSEMBLY UNTIL THE REGULATOR GEAR IS SECURED TO THE
HOUSING! IT IS PRE-TENSIONED BY A LARGE, TIGHTLY WOUND SPRING, AND
HONESTLY COULD POSSIBLY REMOVE A FINGER.
Post script: I took
the old motor apart to see what the problem was. Sure ‘nuff, two teeth
off the drive gear. Internally there is a worm gear coming off the
motor driving a direction change gear which drives a reduction gear
which drives the external gear. All of the internal gears are plastic,
of course. A recent post said that the pins for the door panels are
available at Lowe’s. I couldn’t find them.
Last Updated Saturday, 10 September 2011
Add your comments:
IMPORTANT NOTICE: We are not experts or professionals in any field. Any advice or information found on this website should not be considered as 100% accurate and is provided on an AS-IS basis. Use any information you find here at your own risk. Click here and carefully read and agree to the DISCLAIMER statements before using any information found on this website.
|
Help Support Us
Your donation to help support the services this website provides is appreciated.
Latest Tips and Tutorials
|
(Comments must be approved by the website administrator before they are published)