Originally Posted by
Mark
It's not clear you understood what Fummins suggested by your response?
If one nozzle is spraying, we know the reservoir has fluid and your pump is working.
I would do exactly what Fummins suggested. Pull off the inside hood insulation & look at the hoses. If they look good, I would pull off the hose of the nozzle that's not working. Stick the end of the hose under the opened hood where you can see it & turn on your washer fluid pump. If fluid shoots out when the pump turns on, your nozzle is just plugged. If a hose is busted to that nozzle, you can just replace it with the correct size hose from a hardware store.
Since you know the pump is working, this should be an easy fix. We may not even get to 20+ posts on this one!
I can't reach the spray trigger and examine if fluid is coming up the hose or not. Like at the same time. I need another set of eyes or hands. Actually can't tell anyways because that part of the hose, the Y part, is black.
But I can see if stuff is flowing out the reservoir since that hose is clear. I think.
I want to see what the answer is to that, before I take off the insulation on the hood.
I totally get it that nothing is wrong with my pump, or a case of an empty fluid reservoir.
Little thing like that driving me bonkers eh.
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