have you tryed a pin?
jed
Screen washer jets.
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I got the drivers one out without removing anything else - you can just get pliers on the back of it to mangle it enough to get it out. New ones are a pound or so. To get the tube over the new one applying a fag lighter for a couple of seconds worked a teat. If it doesn't work right after a couple of goes with a pin and an air blast give up- my experience was the ball was loose in the moulding and it just kept moving round until it blocked.
Why does the not quite finished job before last always conspire with the not quite started job after next to make what you should be doing now harder?
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Just caught up with this.
I got my local garage to replace the washer jets when it was in for windscreen leak fix, and they did it by gripping the jets securely with something (Molegrips?) and pulling. Thus probably breaking the little legs on the back or the jets (but I had already supplied them with 4 off replacements). They then attached the washer pipe to the new jet, and pushed it back in the hole.
Result = dash not removed, equals lower bill for me.
Thinking about it now there was a chance of the edge of the hole losing its paint and rusting later on -- but the new jets have good rubbery gaskets and don't leak.
Nor does the windscreen corner any more and I have a dry floor!
I got my local garage to replace the washer jets when it was in for windscreen leak fix, and they did it by gripping the jets securely with something (Molegrips?) and pulling. Thus probably breaking the little legs on the back or the jets (but I had already supplied them with 4 off replacements). They then attached the washer pipe to the new jet, and pushed it back in the hole.
Result = dash not removed, equals lower bill for me.
Thinking about it now there was a chance of the edge of the hole losing its paint and rusting later on -- but the new jets have good rubbery gaskets and don't leak.
Nor does the windscreen corner any more and I have a dry floor!
Member number 2541!