
Here’s something we hear very often from distributors:
“We didn’t have problems at the beginning. But after a few months, complaints started coming in.”
Not immediately after installation.
Usually later, after real use in the market.
Streaking.
Noise.
Skipping.
Uneven wiping.
Sound familiar?
In the aftermarket wiper business, these are not rare cases.
They’re actually the most common feedback pattern we see across different regions.
Most of these issues don’t show up as “defective products” at first.
They show up as complaints, warranty claims, or replacement requests.
This is especially common for distributors sourcing aftermarket or wholesale wiper blades across different vehicle segments.
We usually look at wiper blade issues in a very simple way.
Most cases fall into two main categories:
Wear over time (usage-related)
Fitment or installation mismatch (compatibility-related)
Environment and usage pressure usually act as influencing conditions.
Not perfect science.
But in real bulk orders, this is usually enough to locate the problem quickly.

Most wiper streaking issues are caused by normal rubber wear over time, not product defects.
Customers often describe it as:
“not cleaning properly.”
“leaving lines on the glass.”
“works fine at first, then gets worse.”
In most cases, it doesn’t appear immediately.
It shows up after some time in real use.
From what we’ve seen, streaking is usually a gradual wear process.
In many markets, this aligns with typical wiper blade lifespan, where performance declines after a few months of use (often within a 6–12 month replacement cycle depending on conditions).
Many distributors initially treat this as a product quality issue.
But when we trace it back, it’s often linked to usage conditions and environment.
Noisy wiper blades are usually caused by friction, windshield condition, or arm pressure — not the blade itself.
Typical feedback:
squeaking sound
vibration on the windshield
unstable wiping movement
Noise usually comes from a combination of factors:
friction between rubber and glass (PTFE coated wiper blades)
windshield condition
wiper arm pressure
We’ve seen the same blade behave differently on two vehicles.
So instead of asking “Is the blade bad?”
It’s often more useful to ask:
What changed in the system?
Wiper skipping is most often caused by fitment or compatibility issues in aftermarket applications.
Common causes:
incorrect size
connector mismatch (18 adapters wiper blade system)
uneven arm pressure
Especially when one SKU is used across multiple vehicle models.
What looks like a product issue often starts as a compatibility issue.
We usually don’t start with replacement.
We start with a quick check:
Check size match
Check the connector locking
Check the installation condition
This simple check often solves many typical how to fix wiper problems cases in aftermarket service.
If the issue appears early → check fitment
If it appears after months → check wear
If it varies by vehicle → check compatibility
These are general tendencies.
In real cases, factors often overlap.
Small mismatches early often turn into large return costs later.
Especially when working with new suppliers or wholesale product lines.
After improving fitment verification:
Complaint rates dropped noticeably
Not because the product changed —
But because the early mismatch was reduced.
A small sample test across your main vehicle types
often reveals more than specifications alone.
Learn more about our manufacturing capability here: OEM windshield wiper blade manufacturer
If you're dealing with:
aftermarket complaints
inconsistent performance
multi-vehicle applications
We can help you cross-check:
size matching
connector compatibility
basic fitment
before bulk purchasing decisions.
Typically 6–12 months, depending on climate and usage.
Usually, it is due to the rubber wearing over time.
Check size, connector, and installation before replacing.
Friction, glass condition, or arm pressure.
Incorrect size or connector mismatch.