84 C20
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Sep 24, 2014
- Posts
- 80
- Reaction score
- 102
- Location
- Dallas, Plaestine, Gun Barrel
- First Name
- scuddy
- Truck Year
- 1984
- Truck Model
- C20
- Engine Size
- 350 sb
Background: This 1984 truck originally had crank windows and I changed them over to power two years ago. Periodically, the window would stop part way up (or down, depending on your world outlook) but that was because of my wiring prowess. I've replaced the felt and that's been a bit of a problem because I didn't get it completely seated so the window was slow going up. Sometimes it would jump out the channel but I ascribed it to me having put the parts together poorly.
Skip ahead to the past few days: I've decided I'm tired of playing the "window lottery" so I've replaced the mechanism and started soldering the electrical connections. I've also taken the time to properly seat the channel felt so the window can go up without undue friction. But now the window won't stay in the front channel when it lowers almost all the way. Once I get it back on track, it raises like it's in butter. Really, it's a thing of beauty; makes a nice solid "klunk" when it seats home all the way up. So I put the interior door panel back on, lower the window and it jumps out again. it's always the front edge that jumps and it's always to the inside.
Looking at the mechanism, it doesn't seem like the arm that is in front really follows the window channel very closely. Because of this (in my mind) of course it pulls the window out of the channel. Is it normal to "customize" the mechanism by bending the arms to more closely follow the channel?
Skip ahead to the past few days: I've decided I'm tired of playing the "window lottery" so I've replaced the mechanism and started soldering the electrical connections. I've also taken the time to properly seat the channel felt so the window can go up without undue friction. But now the window won't stay in the front channel when it lowers almost all the way. Once I get it back on track, it raises like it's in butter. Really, it's a thing of beauty; makes a nice solid "klunk" when it seats home all the way up. So I put the interior door panel back on, lower the window and it jumps out again. it's always the front edge that jumps and it's always to the inside.
Looking at the mechanism, it doesn't seem like the arm that is in front really follows the window channel very closely. Because of this (in my mind) of course it pulls the window out of the channel. Is it normal to "customize" the mechanism by bending the arms to more closely follow the channel?