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Parts for your 1992 Suzuki Jimny-Tail lights
1992 Suzuki Jimny tail-lights — purpose, upkeep, and easy servicing tips
Tail-lights are absolutely fitted and relevant to the 1992 Suzuki Jimny (sold in many AU/NZ markets as the Suzuki Sierra/Samurai). This is confirmed by Suzuki factory literature for the SJ413/Samurai era and JA11 Jimny models (owner’s and service manuals list rear position, stop, indicator, and reverse lamps), plus road-legal requirements like Australia’s ADR 13/00 Installation of Lighting and Light-Signalling Devices and New Zealand’s Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Lighting 2004, which mandate operational rear position lamps and stop lamps on road vehicles.
On a 1992 Jimny, the tail-lights do the heavy lifting for safety after dark and in poor weather. They keep the little 4x4 visible from the rear, signal braking, indicate turns, and light the plate — all the basics that help avoid a shunt when the track turns sloppy or the highway fog rolls in. Typically, the stop/tail globe is a dual-filament 12V 21/5W (BAY15d), with separate 21W indicator and reverse globes in the cluster. Using the correct wattage and colour keeps things legal and ensures the beam pattern isn’t wonky.
Servicing is dead simple and worth folding into routine maintenance. If the lens looks hazy, cracked, or full of condensation, it’s time for a closer look. Corrosion on the bulb holders and earth points is common with older Jimnys, especially those that have seen a beach or creek crossing. A quick clean and a dab of dielectric grease goes a long way.
- Pop the tailgate and undo the tail-light screws from the body side.
- Ease the cluster out, twist the bulb holders, and check the globes.
- Replace with the correct type (e.g., P21/5W for stop/tail). Don’t mix up amber and clear bulbs.
- Inspect the lens gasket, replace if perished. Lightly reseal with a non-acidic sealant if needed.
- Clean the earth lug and terminals, refit the cluster and nip the screws up gently.
For those tempted by LEDs: choose ADR/E-marked units or bulbs that don’t trigger hyper-flash or dull the beam, legality and WOF/rego compliance depend on meeting the same performance as the original lamps. After any work, test with the headlights on, press the brake, run indicators and hazards, and select reverse. If a fuse pops, trace for a pinched wire or corroded socket rather than upsizing the fuse.
Technical sources referenced: Suzuki Sierra/Samurai SJ413 Owner’s and Service Manuals (late-1980s to mid-1990s), Suzuki Jimny JA11 Service Manual (1990–1995), Australian Design Rule 13/00 (Installation of Lighting and Light-Signalling Devices), and NZ Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Lighting 2004.
Popular questions
What bulb types fit the 1992 Suzuki Jimny tail-lights?
Most use a dual-filament P21/5W (BAY15d) for stop/tail, a 21W BA15s amber for the indicator, and a 21W BA15s clear for reverse. Number plate lights are commonly small wedge types. Always check the existing base and wattage before buying.
Are LED tail-light bulbs legal on a 1992 Jimny in AU/NZ?
They can be, provided the lamps still meet the required lighting performance and compliance. Use ADR/E-marked LEDs, ensure correct colour and intensity, and fix indicator flash rates with proper resistors or an LED flasher. If unsure, check local state/territory guidance or NZ WOF requirements.
Why do my Jimny tail-lights fog up, and how do I stop it?
Age-hardening gaskets, hairline lens cracks, or missing vent caps let moisture in. Replace the lens gasket, repair or replace cracked lenses, clean the vent paths, and avoid over-tightening screws that warp the housing. A light bead of neutral-cure sealant helps keep water out.