Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

Brands

Show More Show Less

Price

Parts for your 2001 Nissan Pulsar-Headlights

Sort by

Explore 4WD & Adventure

Showing 352 - 390 of 5633 products

2001 Nissan Pulsar Headlights — Purpose, Care, and Replacement Tips

Technical sources including the Nissan Pulsar N16 Owner’s Manual and Service Manual, Australian Design Rules (ADR 13/00 – Installation of Lighting and Light Signalling Devices), and the New Zealand Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Lighting 2004 confirm that the 2001 Nissan Pulsar is factory-fitted with headlamps and must use them for legal road use. So yes—headlights are relevant, fitted, and essential on this model.

The headlights on a 2001 Nissan Pulsar do the heavy lifting for safe night and low-visibility driving. They provide forward illumination, make the Pulsar visible to others, and include high beam for country roads along with indicators and park lamps in the same front cluster. On most AU/NZ N16 trims, low and high beam are halogen bulbs, commonly an H4 dual‑filament, with some variants using separate bulbs. Either way, they’re straightforward to service if a lamp fails or the lens goes cloudy.

When it’s time to replace a bulb, the process is typically done from under the bonnet: remove the rear dust cover, unplug the connector, release the spring clip, swap the bulb, and refit in reverse. Don’t touch the glass—skin oils shorten bulb life. Replace bulbs in pairs to keep brightness and colour even, and check the headlight aim afterwards to avoid dazzling oncoming traffic.

For ongoing care, it’s good practice to inspect the headlights every 10,000 km or at each service interval:

  • Check for dim, flickering, or blown bulbs, test both low and high beam.
  • Look for lens haze or yellowing, a quality plastic polish can restore clarity.
  • Inspect seals and vents, persistent condensation may indicate a cracked lens or perished gasket.
  • Verify beam aim on level ground, adjusters are on the lamp housing.
  • If upgrading bulbs, stick to ADR/NZ-compliant wattage and RHD beam patterns.

If the lens is cracked, mounting tabs are broken, or the reflector is dull, a full headlight assembly replacement is the safest bet. Choose parts that meet ADR/NZ standards to keep the car legal for rego/WOF checks and to maintain proper beam cut-off. A quick electrical check of fuses and earths is also wise if both sides go out.

What headlight bulb fits a 2001 Nissan Pulsar?

Most Australian and NZ-market N16 Pulsars use an H4 dual‑filament halogen bulb for both low and high beam. Some trims and special editions use separate bulbs (commonly H7 low beam and H1 high beam). Always confirm against the owner’s manual or by inspecting the existing bulb before purchase.

How do you adjust the headlight aim on a 2001 Pulsar?

Park on level ground facing a wall, about three to five metres back. With low beam on and the car at normal ride height, use the vertical and horizontal adjuster screws on the rear of each headlight to set the cut-off just below the headlamp centreline and slightly down-left for RHD markets. Small turns make a big difference—aim for an even, sharp cut-off without glare.

Why is there condensation inside the headlight, and is it a problem?

Light misting after rain can be normal as air vents equalise pressure. Persistent moisture or pooling water usually means a compromised seal, cracked lens, or missing dust cover. Dry the unit (lamp out, vent open), then address the source—replace the seal or assembly if cracks or damaged tabs are found.