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Parts for your 2010 Nissan Pulsar-Headlight bulbs

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2010 Nissan Pulsar headlight-bulbs: purpose, servicing and replacement

Headlight-bulbs are fitted to the 2010 Nissan Pulsar (sold in AU/NZ as the Tiida C11), as confirmed by Nissan’s 2010 Tiida owner’s manual bulb chart and major automotive bulb guides from Osram and Philips. Those technical references list replaceable halogen lamps for the headlamps, making headlight-bulbs directly relevant to this vehicle.

On this model, the headlight-bulbs do the heavy lifting for safe night driving, wet-weather visibility and compliance with local road rules. Most 2010 Pulsar/Tiida variants use a single H4 60/55W halogen bulb per headlamp for both high and low beam. In some trims and markets there may be separate bulbs for each beam (commonly H11 low and HB3/9005 high). Either way, they’re standard, serviceable components designed to be swapped when they age, go dim or fail.

Good bulbs throw a clean, even beam so drivers can see hazards sooner and be seen by others. Because halogens slowly lose brightness over time, owners typically notice a yellowing or shorter reach well before a full failure. That’s the cue to replace them, not just when one finally pops.

  • Confirm the exact bulb type first: check the owner’s manual, the stamp on the dust cap, or the parts label under the bonnet.
  • Replace in pairs. Light output and colour shift with age, so doing both sides keeps the beam balanced.
  • Never touch the glass. Oils from skin create hot spots, handle by the base or use clean gloves.
  • Inspect connectors, fuses and earths if failures are frequent, over-voltage charging can shorten bulb life.
  • Refit dust caps and seals carefully to keep moisture out, then check headlight aim on level ground.
  • Stick to ADR/WOF-legal wattage. “Plus” performance halogens that claim more light at the same wattage are fine, avoid higher-watt globes that can overheat housings.

Access on the Pulsar/Tiida is usually via the rear of the headlamp, on one side, removing the intake snorkel or shifting the battery clamp may help. As part of regular servicing, a quick beam pattern check, lens clean, and a look for condensation or haze keeps the lighting sharp. For drivers chasing an upgrade, quality +130% halogen bulbs can lift performance without straying from legality, whereas LED retrofit kits in halogen housings are generally not road-legal in AU/NZ unless part of a certified headlamp assembly.

Popular questions

What headlight-bulb fits a 2010 Nissan Pulsar?
Most use an H4 60/55W halogen for combined high/low beam. Some variants run separate bulbs (H11 low, HB3/9005 high). The safest bet is to confirm via the 2010 Tiida/Pulsar manual, the headlamp dust cap marking, or the vehicle’s parts label.

Can LED headlight-bulbs be used legally in a 2010 Pulsar?
Retrofit LED bulbs in halogen housings are generally not road-legal in Australia or New Zealand. To stay compliant, use ADR/WOF-approved halogen replacements. Legal LED options require a certified headlamp assembly designed for LED, not just a bulb swap.

Why do my headlight-bulbs keep blowing?
Frequent failures can point to vibration, poor earths, moisture in the housing, or charging-system over-voltage (consistently above about 14.7V). Check mounts, seals and connectors, and have the alternator output tested. Also avoid touching bulb glass during fitting.

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