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Parts for your 2010 Nissan Dualis-Tail lights
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2010 Nissan Dualis tail-lights — purpose, care, and replacement
Tail-lights are absolutely fitted and relevant on the 2010 Nissan Dualis (J10). Technical sources such as the Nissan Dualis/Qashqai J10 Owner’s Manual (bulb replacement and lighting controls), the Nissan Electronic Service Manual (Rear Combination Lamp/LT section), and Australian Design Rules (ADR 13/00 and ADR 49/00, harmonised with ECE R7 for rear position lamps) confirm that the Dualis uses rear combination lamps incorporating tail (rear position) and stop (brake) functions. So, yes—tail-lights are part of the standard equipment and are required for roadworthy/WOF compliance.
The tail-lights on a 2010 Dualis make the vehicle visible from behind at night and in poor weather, while the brighter brake filaments warn following traffic when it’s slowing. They’re designed to meet ADR/ECE intensity and colour specs, working together with indicators and reverse lamps in the rear combination assembly. Keep them healthy and they’ll quietly do their job every kilometre.
Servicing-wise, it’s smart to check tail-lights at each service interval (or every 6 months), and any time before a long trip. A quick walk-around with the lights on, or a check against a garage door at dusk, picks up blown globes or dim outputs fast. If one side fails, replace both sides together to keep brightness matched.
Most 2010 Dualis variants use conventional dual‑filament bulbs for the tail/stop function (commonly P21/5W), while some trims and markets use LED elements within the lamp. If yours has LED tails, the individual LEDs aren’t serviceable—replace the lamp assembly. Always choose ADR‑compliant parts, avoid blue‑tinted or non‑approved globes that can reduce visibility or attract a defect.
- Check fuses and the rear lamp earth if both sides seem dim or dead.
- Access the lamp via the rear trim panel, support the lamp to avoid scratching paint.
- Avoid touching the glass of halogen globes—use gloves or a clean tissue.
- Inspect gaskets and seals, a light smear of silicone‑safe grease helps keep moisture out.
- After refit, test tail and brake brightness, confirm no warning messages or rapid indicator flash.
Watch for common issues like condensation, hairline lens cracks, or corroded bulb holders. Minor misting that clears is often acceptable, visible water or pooling means the seal or housing needs attention. Keeping the lenses clean and intact isn’t just tidy—it keeps light output up and your Dualis legal on Aussie and Kiwi roads.
Popular questions about 2010 Nissan Dualis tail-lights
Q: What bulb type does the 2010 Dualis use for the tail/brake lights?
Most models run a dual‑filament P21/5W globe in the rear combination lamp. Some variants feature LED tail/stop elements, in which case the whole lamp assembly is replaced rather than a globe. The quickest way to confirm is to check the owner’s manual or pull the holder and look at the fitting.
Q: Is condensation inside the tail-light a problem?
Light fogging that clears as the lamp warms is usually fine. If you see visible droplets, pooling water, or mist that never clears, the seal or housing is compromised. That can dull output and risk a WOF/RWC fail. Reseal the gasket or replace the lamp if the lens is cracked.
Q: Can I upgrade my Dualis to LED tail bulbs?
Yes, but use ADR‑compliant replacements that maintain correct colour and brightness. Some vehicles may flag bulb‑out warnings or cause hyperflash with non‑matched LEDs, so choose CANBUS‑compatible units. If your Dualis has factory LED tails, upgrades generally mean swapping the complete lamp assembly.