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Parts for your 1996 Suzuki Jimny-Tail lights

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1996 Suzuki Jimny tail-lights: what they do and how to look after them

Tail-lights are absolutely fitted and relevant on a 1996 Suzuki Jimny. Factory documentation for the Jimny/Sierra platform (SJ/JA series) lists a rear combination lamp assembly as standard equipment, carrying tail (rear position), stop, indicator, reverse and reflector functions. This aligns with Australian Design Rule 13/00 on lighting installation and New Zealand’s Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Lighting 2004, both of which require operational rear position lamps on road vehicles. ECE Regulation 7 (rear position lamps) covers the underlying performance standard used by many manufacturers of the era. So yes—tail-lights are a must on this model.

On a 1996 Jimny, the tail-lights do a lot more than just glow red at night. The rear combination lamps house your tail (rear position) lights for night-time visibility, brighter stop lights for braking, amber indicators for signalling turns, and clear reverse lamps to light the way when backing up. They also include red reflectors, which are a passive safety backup when the lights aren’t switched on. In short, they help other road users see what the Jimny is doing—crucial for a lightweight 4x4 that often shares tight roads and off‑highway tracks.

As part of regular servicing, it’s smart to give the tail-lights a once-over. Touring, corrugations and river crossings can shake bulbs, loosen earths and let dust or moisture sneak into housings. Most 1996 Jimnys run common 12V bulbs: a dual‑filament 21/5 W stop/tail (often marked P21/5W, BAY15d), single‑filament 21 W amber for indicators (BA15s), and 21 W clear for reverse. Stick with quality, ADR/ECE‑compliant lamps to keep brightness and beam colour on point.

  • Clean the lenses with mild soap to keep light output sharp, avoid harsh solvents that haze plastic.
  • Inspect for cracks, faded reflectors and perished gaskets—replace if there’s any sign of water ingress.
  • Check bulb filaments and contacts, a dab of dielectric grease on the socket helps prevent corrosion.
  • Verify earths: a dim or “back‑feeding” lamp usually points to a dodgy ground on the body or cluster.
  • If upgrading to LEDs, use ADR/ECE‑approved lamps or complete ADR‑compliant assemblies, mismatched retrofits can be non‑compliant and cause glare.

Replacement is straightforward: remove the lamp screws from the body or rear trim, pull the cluster, twist out the bulb holders, swap bulbs like‑for‑like, and refit with a fresh seal if needed. Test every function—tail, brake, left/right indicators and reverse—before heading off. A quick check every few months (and after water crossings) keeps the Jimny legal, visible and safe.

What bulb types fit the 1996 Jimny’s tail-lights?

Most 1996 Jimnys use a dual‑filament 12V 21/5 W bulb (P21/5W, BAY15d) for the stop/tail, a 21 W amber single‑filament (PY21W/BAU15s or BA15s depending on market) for indicators, and a 21 W clear (P21W/BA15s) for reverse. Always check the stamping on your old bulb or the vehicle’s lamp holder to match base type and wattage.

How can they tell if a bad earth is causing tail-light issues?

If the brake light glows faintly, indicators flash fast or other lamps light up together, suspect a poor ground. Inspect the tail-light cluster’s earth wire and the body earth point for rust or looseness. Clean to bare metal, tighten, and protect with dielectric grease. This fixes most dim or flickering rear light gremlins on older Jimnys.

Are LED tail-light bulbs legal on a 1996 Jimny in Australia or New Zealand?

They’re only acceptable if the LED replacements and the lamp assembly comply with ADR/ECE requirements for that function. Many retrofit bulbs aren’t certified in the original halogen/filament housings. To stay on the right side of the rules, use ADR/ECE‑approved LED units or complete replacement lamp assemblies marked as compliant, or stick with quality filament bulbs.

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