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Parts for your 1998 Daihatsu Terios-Batteries
Narva Model 72 Rear Stop/Tail/Indicator Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable
Narva 9-33 Volt LED Rear Stop/Tail, Right Hand Squential direcion indicator and reverse lamps with in built retro reflector and 0.5m hard wired cable - 97312R
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Narva Model 72 Rear Stop/Tail/Indicator/Reverse Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable
Narva Model 70 Rear Stop/Tail/Indicator Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable
Narva MDL34 Stop/Tail/Indicator Light With Licence Plate Lamp LED 12V - 2 Pce - 93440BL2
Narva Model 70 Rear Stop/Tail/Indicator/Reverse Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable
Narva 9-33 Volt Surface Mount LED front end outline marker(white) with Chrome cover and 0.5m cable and Deutsch connector - 96812-D
Narva Model 70 Rear Stop/Tail /Indicator Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable, Bulk Pack Of 4 - 97000-1/4
Narva Model 70 Rear Stop/Tail/Indicator/Reverse Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable - 97010-1
Narva 9-33 Volt Surface Mount LED rear end outline marker lamp(red) with Black cover and 0.5m cable - 96832B
1998 Daihatsu Terios Batteries: Purpose, Fitment and Service Advice
Technical sources including the Daihatsu Terios J100-series workshop manual (1997–2006) and OEM parts catalogues specify a 12‑volt lead‑acid starting battery for the 1998 Terios (1.3L petrol, HC‑EJ), so a battery is absolutely relevant and fitted to this model. Like most late‑90s Japanese SUVs, it relies on a 12V SLI (Starting, Lighting, Ignition) battery to power cranking, engine management, fuel pump, lights and accessories, with charging handled by the alternator.
For the 1998 Daihatsu Terios, the battery’s job is straightforward: deliver a strong burst of current to crank the engine, then stabilise and buffer the electrical system while the alternator keeps everything running. A healthy battery also safeguards electronics by smoothing voltage dips and spikes, which matters when headlights, demister and A/C are all on during a cool, wet Kiwi evening or a hot Aussie arvo.
When replacement time rolls around, Terios owners should match the physical case (common JIS sizes for this class include B19 or B24), the terminal layout (often “L” positive on the left, but confirm against the existing unit), and choose a cold‑cranking rating in the 330–450 CCA range depending on climate and accessories. AGM can be a nice upgrade for vibration resistance and light accessory loads, though a quality flooded lead‑acid unit typically suits a standard Terios just fine.
Service-friendly habits make a big difference:
- Inspect age and condition: most batteries last 3–5 years