safety reasons for kids
Your rear passenger seat windows on the Ford Explorer do not go all the way down for the protection of the children that might be sitting in the rear seats
You don't. Like most rear windows on four door vehicles this is the case. Since the rear doors conform to the rear wheel well, the window does not have room in the door to go down all the way.
If the windows don't go all the way down, it is likely they are designed that way because of the shape of the door and can not be fixed.
They don't go all the way down. You could break them?!
If it stops just a bit, then it's all the way it can go. If it goes all the way down, then you have it!
They may not go all the way down due to the curvature of the car door.
it is not an ez task. if you are good at fabrication you can get front window tracks at the junkyard and cut up the back doors to make them work. i have installed electric in mine and after two days of fabrication my rear windows go down all the way.
Is the motor getting power? is the regulator working? The rear windows will not go all the way down. It is a child protection thing. They will only roll down half way.
The short answer is no. Not all Corvette rear windows could be removed. I do not have a list, but most were the "Flat back windows" between 1968 and 1977, and not all of these were made to be removed.
all the slinding rear windows that i put in you had to replace the whole rear glass
no all heated rear windows are electronic. in some older cars the battery is degraded and will not power the rear windows so well whilst the engine is not running, but once the engine is on and the alternator takes over there should be no change in how good the heated rear windows work
The rear windows on the Generation 3 Ford Taurus's (1996-1999) are not able to roll down completely because of the door design. The window cannot fit into the lower door cavity. Contrary to popular belief, there is no Federal regulation or reason behind this other than the door shape and design.