You proved my theory.I run the 16"s . Any longer and they touch the top of the window just a bit.

I went the easy way, I removed the wipers and put rain x.It said 16" on the little machine when I bought em
It's not just snow I'm talking about though. I've had 41 vehicles, and the squarebodies had the worst wiper systems of any of them hands down. Rain or whatever. Theyre slow, weak, don't clear more than a small portion of the window, etc.
It sounds like others think the same. I kind of figured that with thousands of these out there, someone would have devised a way to make them better. And that if there was a place to find said fix, it'd be here.
Which is why I made the thread lol. It sounds like people have looked into the slow windows, weak lights, dim dash lights, and many other common issues... But just lived with sub par wipers.
Surprises is all
I still struggle with this on my freightliner when I drive in the snow.Rain-x works wonders on mine. I even take the rag that I did the glass with and rub the wiper blades down with it. They tend to glide better over the glass. Usually in the rain with rain-x on the glass I rarely have to even turn them on. Snow is a different animal though. I try not to clear the window with the blades if it's covered up. I'll brush it off. Still if I'm driving in a good snowstorm I'll get build up of snow/crud that as long as I keep the blades moving they keep up with it. But at that point I've had the blades do the same thing as my S10 or Trailblazer in that they streak like mad when a chunk freezes to the blade itself.
Watching to see if a simple fix comes up.
Now that you spit it out, I can help you.One of the reasons I want to beef em up is mud. Thick chunky mud. I do plan on putting a high capacity/pressure washer system on it. But chugging down a level B road in Iowa after a good couple days or rain will leave you with fist size chunks of mud raining down on you for the duration of the road. My old 3/4 ton burb, and big block half ton had a lot of issues with keeping the window clean on these roads. I prefer NOT to wheel like that. But it's what I got.
From what I've gathered on this site, few people here do mud. So I used snow because it does the same thing kind of. And I won't even use washer fluid with rain x or (repellant) in it lol. I hate the stuff like crazy. I don't know if it's because of gravel road dust or what, but it's always turned into a streaky mess when I tried using it.
There's 5 wires on my motor, I have the factory harness plugs and about 3" of wire for all 5.........
Does anyone know what wire does what ?
My harness from the firewall out is entirely different. It has the old style plugs.
Plugs are for the round one, the one I got is the squared one.What year is yours? Is the motor round or kinda square?
You proved my theory.
They are designed to run 14"
That gives you plenty of vision, you don't need the whole windshield to be clean to drive safely.
You are putting more strain on a design that is marginal.
I don't have snow here and there are a couple of cars I had I used 1" longer blades to cover more of the windshield but my suburban goes to the mountains in the snow so it has stock size wipets.