Ecto1
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #1
I finally had to adjust the Passenger side Rear Window on my car. Until recently I was able to get the window to raise completely as long as the Engine was running but that stopped working. The Window would get ALMOST closed but not enough. I had to open the door, grab the front edge of the Window, and pull it the rest of the way so it was completely closed.
I took the back seat out to replace the rear Speakers and while I had things apart I diddled with the window. Turns out the window on my car was raising too far and hitting the weather-strip in the Top. See image below:
The top of the Rear glass should be the same height as the Door glass. See image below (this is the Driver's side):
There are 2 bolts that have to be loosened so you can adjust the glass. One of them is covered by a rubber plug (at least it was on my car). See image below: It's the rubber plug with the yellow stains on it.
The 2 bolts are recessed quite a ways behind the body panel. You'll have to use a socket extension to reach them. Be CAREFUL. I snagged the socket on the lip of the hole in the body panel and dropped the socket and extension down in between the body panel and the window mechanism. I was able to retrieve it, luckily, but it's VERY easy to lose the sockets down into this abyss.
This is what the bolts look like when the rubber plug is removed:
After loosening the bolts you can adjust the glass. It takes some diddling to get things sorted out. This was the best I was able to achieve with my Passenger Side Window:
I'm not sure why I can't get the top of both pieces of glass to match like on the Driver's side. It may be due to how the Rear Glass on the Passenger side is installed or the manufacturing tolerances, but I suspect the REAL problem is that the Passenger side Door Glass needs to be raised to match the height of the Rear Window Glass.
For my purposes this is good enough. I can now raise the Rear Windows with the Top Up and not have to manually adjust the glass afterwards. I don't have any water leaks so I can live with the Glass adjustments as they are now.
FYI.
I took the back seat out to replace the rear Speakers and while I had things apart I diddled with the window. Turns out the window on my car was raising too far and hitting the weather-strip in the Top. See image below:
The top of the Rear glass should be the same height as the Door glass. See image below (this is the Driver's side):
There are 2 bolts that have to be loosened so you can adjust the glass. One of them is covered by a rubber plug (at least it was on my car). See image below: It's the rubber plug with the yellow stains on it.
The 2 bolts are recessed quite a ways behind the body panel. You'll have to use a socket extension to reach them. Be CAREFUL. I snagged the socket on the lip of the hole in the body panel and dropped the socket and extension down in between the body panel and the window mechanism. I was able to retrieve it, luckily, but it's VERY easy to lose the sockets down into this abyss.
This is what the bolts look like when the rubber plug is removed:
After loosening the bolts you can adjust the glass. It takes some diddling to get things sorted out. This was the best I was able to achieve with my Passenger Side Window:
I'm not sure why I can't get the top of both pieces of glass to match like on the Driver's side. It may be due to how the Rear Glass on the Passenger side is installed or the manufacturing tolerances, but I suspect the REAL problem is that the Passenger side Door Glass needs to be raised to match the height of the Rear Window Glass.
For my purposes this is good enough. I can now raise the Rear Windows with the Top Up and not have to manually adjust the glass afterwards. I don't have any water leaks so I can live with the Glass adjustments as they are now.
FYI.
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