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posted by on Sunday February 19 2017, @07:23PM   Printer-friendly
from the lazy-sunday dept.

The next time you're in a parking lot, or when you're walking on the sidewalk along a street with lots of parked cars, take a look at the windshield wipers. On some cars, the wiper arms are mounted fairly close to each other and are designed to move in unison. On others, the arms are mounted at opposite sides of the car and face each other in the center of the windshield. Some wiper arms are short and some are long. Some are straight, and some, especially on newer cars, are curved or bent.

Like so many things we take for granted, wiper design turns out to be a surprisingly nuanced rabbit hole once you take a moment to notice it, with no two cars seeming to have the same configuration. It's fun to imagine an army of industrious wiper elves coming up with just the right design to provide the proper visual accent for each vehicle.

But the reality is that wiper design is driven primarily by practicalities, not aesthetics. "The wiper system is usually designed pretty late in the process," said Doug Patton, executive vice president of engineering for Denso International America, which makes wiper systems and other automotive components for many car brands. "That's why you see these variations from car to car. The wiper system is usually designed to work within the rest of the vehicle design."

[...] "As you're designing and styling the car, there are people who'll check it for engineering feasibility, including those wipe percentages," said Gausden. "If they can't meet those federal requirements, they may have to change the windshield angle and curvature, or even the hood placement. So the wiper system isn't always the red-headed stepchild. It can drive and impact styling regarding hood height and windshield angle."

-- submitted from IRC


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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by bradley13 on Monday February 20 2017, @11:36AM

    by bradley13 (3053) on Monday February 20 2017, @11:36AM (#469235) Homepage Journal

    The wipers and wipe-regions are part of a larger battle over visibility in a car. Visibility in modern cars is actually pretty horrible, compared to past decades.

    Consider this picture of a car from the 1950s [pinimg.com]. Note, in particular, the huge amount of glass, and the comparatively small obstructions by the columns supporting the roof. Compare that to a modern car. [chevrolet.com] Note the huge columns, blocking your view on all four diagonals. Also the comparatively tiny back window. Visibility in older cars is massively better.

    Part of this is rollover protection: the roof pillars have to be strong enough to support the weight of the car. But that doesn't account for all of it - the pillars are much, much larger than required simply for structure (interior view) [automobilemag.com]. Subjectively, this seems to be getting worse and worse. Frankly, in some cars, it's to the point of feeling (subjectively) dangerous.

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