Check fuses and relays
You may have a bad wiper motor switch or eletrical short
Usually it is part of the wiper motor.
There is a switch inside the wiper motor that identifies the home spot for the wipers. If you have intermittent wipers there is also a controller for that. Either can give you problems but more likely the wiper motor switch. The wiper motor switch usually is not a separate part (comes with wiper motor assy.) Oh yeah, 1 other thing, be sure the wiper arms are installed correctly on wiper motor.
It is in the motor.
check the wiper fuse. then check the switch, then check the wiper motor
Possibly bad wiper motor, bad park switch, or bad wiper switch. Electrical short also possible.
Fire, or power, to the wiper motor in a 1985 s10 Blazer comes from the battery, through the wiper switch and to the motor. Check the switch, fuse, and all connections to find the loss of power.
It may be the wiper switch, it may be the motor. You may want to try putting power directly to the motor to confirm that the motor is good.
Please clarify or explain what you are trying to accomplish. There are no dip switch setting on that wiper motor that I have ever seen.
Assuming they did not work with the old wiper motor, check the fuse, check the switch.
I have a 99 Jeep Wrangler Sport. My wipers would somtimes work, other times not. Now they don't work at all. Checked the fuse and replaced the switch with a brand new one, still nothing. My guess, if you have the same problem, is that the wiper motor has burned out.
That depends on what you're calling the "control module". There is a switch that controls where the wiper blades "park". It's inside the wiper motor assembly. In fact, most of the controls, except the switch on the steering column, are inside the wiper motor.