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Parts for your 1998 Mitsubishi Pajero-Tail lights

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1998 Mitsubishi Pajero Tail-lights — What They Do and How to Look After Them

Tail-lights are absolutely fitted and required on the 1998 Mitsubishi Pajero. That’s backed by the Mitsubishi Pajero Owner’s Manual and Workshop/Service Manual (Electrical—Lighting), as well as Australian Design Rules (ADR 13/00 and 49/00) and New Zealand’s Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Lighting 2004, which mandate rear position lamps on road vehicles. So yes—tail-lights are relevant, used, and legally essential on a ’98 Pajero.

On this generation Pajero, the rear combination lamp assemblies typically sit in the bumper and house the tail (rear position) lamps, brake lamps, indicators, and reverse lamps, with rear fog lamps fitted depending on market spec. Their job is simple but critical: make the Pajero visible at night and in poor weather, clearly show braking and turning intentions, and light the path when reversing. Good tail-lights keep it safe, legal, and easy to live with on Aussie and Kiwi roads.

For servicing, it’s a straightforward bit of kit most owners can manage. Common bulb types are often P21/5W (stop/tail) and P21W (indicator/reverse), but the exact spec can vary by trim—always check the owner’s manual or the lamp markings. Access is usually via the tailgate area: remove the trim panel, undo the lamp fasteners, ease the cluster out, then twist the bulb holders to replace globes. Avoid touching the glass with bare fingers, and reseal the lamp snugly so it stays watertight.

They’ll thank you for a quick check at every service or before a rego/WOF. Look for cracked or faded lenses, moisture inside, corroded bulb holders, or intermittent operation (often a dodgy earth). If upgrading to LEDs, choose ADR/NZTA-compliant units and use the right resistors or an LED-compatible flasher to keep indicator speed correct.

  • Test tail, brake, indicator, and reverse functions monthly.
  • Clean lenses with mild car shampoo—skip harsh solvents.
  • Use dielectric grease on bulb holder contacts to fight corrosion.
  • Replace cracked seals or clips to prevent leaks and condensation.

Whether sticking with OEM-style globes or going LED, using quality, compliant parts keeps the Pajero visible, legal, and ready for long trips or rough tracks.

FAQs

What bulb types fit a 1998 Pajero tail-light?
Most models use P21/5W for the stop/tail and P21W for indicators and reverse, but variants exist by trim and market. The safest bet is to confirm against the owner’s manual or the markings on the bulb holder before buying.

My indicators flash fast after fitting LED bulbs—why?
LEDs draw less current, so the flasher thinks a bulb has blown. Fit ADR/NZTA-compliant resistor kits or an LED-compatible flasher relay to restore the correct flash rate without triggering a fault.

Are the tail-lights in the bumper or the body on a 1998 Pajero?
For this generation, they’re commonly bumper-mounted combination lamps, with market-dependent variations. A quick look at the rear bumper area will confirm where yours are located.

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