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Parts for your 1988 Mitsubishi Pajero-Headlights
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1988 Mitsubishi Pajero Headlights
Headlights are absolutely relevant and factory‑fitted on the 1988 Mitsubishi Pajero (first‑generation L040/NE series). This is supported by the Mitsubishi workshop and owner literature for the model year, which specify halogen headlamps, and by Australian and New Zealand lighting regulations that require compliant dipped and main beams on road‑going vehicles of this class.
- Mitsubishi Pajero (L040) workshop manual, Electrical – Lighting section: halogen headlamps and aiming procedure.
- Mitsubishi Genuine Parts catalogue for 1988 Pajero (NE), Lighting components: headlamp assemblies, bulbs/sealed‑beam variants by market.
- Australian Design Rules (ADR 13/00, ADR 46/00): lighting installation and headlamp performance requirements, NZ Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Lighting 2004.
- 1988 Pajero owner’s handbook: headlight operation, bulb replacement, fuse and relay locations.
On a 1988 Pajero, the headlights do the heavy lifting after dark and in poor weather, delivering a safe, ADR/NZ‑rule compliant beam for country roads, city commutes, and outback tracks. Most Aussie and Kiwi‑delivered vehicles use H4 60/55W halogen bulbs in a serviceable housing, some markets ran 200 mm sealed‑beam lamps. Either way, they’re designed to cop the rough and still keep visibility clear.
As part of regular servicing, it’s smart to replace headlight bulbs in pairs to keep brightness and colour even. If using H4s, stick with quality 12V 60/55W units that meet ECE R37 and ADR/NZ specs—going higher wattage can cook the wiring and reflectors. If your Pajero has sealed beams, swap the whole unit when it burns out or the lens goes cloudy.
Good habits go a long way:
- Check aim every 12 months or after suspension/tyre changes. A poorly aimed lamp can blind oncoming traffic or leave the verge in the dark.
- Inspect lenses for haze, cracks, or moisture. Light yellowing can be polished, heavy crazing means it’s time for new units.
- Clean earth points and check the headlight relay and fuses if you notice dimming or flicker. Old wiring benefits from tidy terminals and proper heat‑shrink.
- Keep the lens clean—dust and mud slash light output. A quick wash before a night run makes a real difference.
Upgrades like modern halogen +30/+50 bulbs are fine if they remain the standard wattage and the housing’s in good nick. LED “retrofit” bulbs in halogen housings are often not road‑legal in AU/NZ unless the assembly is certified, save those for off‑road only and check local rules before fitting.
Popular questions about 1988 Mitsubishi Pajero headlights
What bulb type does a 1988 Pajero use?
Most Australian and New Zealand models use an H4 12V 60/55W halogen in a replaceable‑bulb housing. Some imports and earlier variants may use 200 mm sealed‑beam units. A quick look at the back of the lamp (plug into bulb holder vs sealed glass unit) or checking the handbook will confirm which you’ve got.
How do you aim the headlights correctly?
Park on level ground about 7.5 m from a wall, tyre pressures set and fuel half full. Mark the lamp centre heights on the wall, then use the vertical and horizontal adjusters on each headlight to set low beam cut‑off just below the centre line with a slight kick‑up to the left (RHD markets). Recheck after any suspension work or heavy loads.
Are LED headlight conversions legal on a 1988 Pajero?
Generally, swapping LED bulbs into halogen housings isn’t road‑legal in AU/NZ unless the complete lamp assembly is approved to the relevant standards. Many aftermarket LED bulbs are “off‑road only.” If you want brighter legal lights, use quality H4 halogens at the correct wattage or fit a certified replacement headlamp assembly.