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Parts for your 2008 Toyota Corolla fielder-Headlights
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2008 Toyota Corolla Fielder Headlights
Headlights are absolutely fitted to, and legally required on, the 2008 Toyota Corolla Fielder (E14x series, e.g., NZE141/ZRE142). Technical sources back this up: Toyota’s owner’s manuals for the E140/E150 platform list headlamp bulb specifications and replacement procedures, Australian Design Rules ADR 13/00 and ADR 46/00 mandate dipped and main-beam headlamps, and New Zealand’s Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Lighting 2004 requires compliant headlamps for road use. So headlights are not only relevant on this model—they’re essential for safety, WOF/rego compliance, and night driving.
The Corolla Fielder’s headlights do the heavy lifting after dark, delivering dipped beam for everyday use and a clear main beam for open-road visibility. On most 2008 Fielder trims, the low beam is H11 and the high beam is HB3 (9005), some higher-spec variants run factory HID/Xenon low beams (D4S/D4R) with auto-levelling and washers. Keeping them in top nick is a simple way to make night drives safer and stop a WOF niggle before it starts.
As part of regular servicing, it’s worth checking the headlight operation, alignment, lens clarity, and beam pattern. If a bulb’s gone dim or popped, replace in pairs to keep colour and brightness even. For halogen bulbs, avoid touching the glass with bare fingers—skin oils can shorten bulb life. Stick with ADR/ECE-compliant bulbs and don’t jump to over‑wattage units that can cook wiring and housings.
Cloudy or yellowed lenses are common on older polycarbonate units. A decent restoration kit usually brings them back, if the UV coating is shot, reinstalling a proper clear UV sealant is key or the haze will return. Persistent moisture inside the lamp points to a tired seal or cracked housing—sort the leak, then dry the unit thoroughly to protect reflectors and electronics.
For HID-equipped cars, be mindful of high voltage—if unsure, let a qualified auto sparky handle it. After any front-end work or bulb change, recheck aim. Many Fielder variants have manual height adjusters, for imports with cabin levelling dials, set the load correctly and fine-tune on a flat surface at night without dazzling oncoming traffic.
- Inspect operation and aim at each service or 10,000 km.
- Clean lenses with pH-neutral car wash, avoid harsh solvents.
- Check fuses and connectors if a light is intermittent.
Popular questions about 2008 Toyota Corolla Fielder headlights
What bulb sizes does a 2008 Corolla Fielder use?
Most 2008 Fielder models use H11 for low beam and HB3 (9005) for high beam. Park/position bulbs are typically T10 wedge. Some higher trims run HID/Xenon low beams using D4S or D4R capsules with dedicated ballasts. Always confirm against the owner’s manual or the marking on the lamp housing to account for trim and market differences.
If the car’s a JDM import, the build plate and lamp labels usually list the correct bulb codes. When in doubt, pull the old bulb and match the code.
Why are my headlights cloudy or yellow, and can they be fixed?
That haze is UV damage to the plastic lens. It scatters light and hurts night vision. A quality restoration kit can polish away oxidation and, importantly, reapply a UV coating so the clarity lasts. If the coating step is skipped, the cloudiness tends to return within months.
Severely crazed or cracked lenses are best replaced. After restoration, keep lenses clean and occasionally apply a UV protectant to slow future fading.
How should the headlights be aimed on a Fielder?
Use the vertical and horizontal adjusters on the lamp backs to set a clean cutoff that sits slightly below horizontal at 10 metres. If the car has a cabin levelling dial, set it to the recommended position based on load. The goal is strong forward light without dazzling oncoming drivers, matching ADR/ECE patterns.
If aiming is unfamiliar or the car has HID with auto-levelling, a workshop beamsetter makes quick, accurate work of it and keeps the vehicle WOF-compliant.