Your Selected Vehicle
Parts for your 2012 Nissan Pulsar-Headlights
9-33 Volt LED Reverse, Rear Direction Indicator and Stop Lamps with LED Tail Rings - 94365C
9-33 Volt LED Rear Direction Indicator and Twin Stop Lamps with LED Tail Rings - 94364C
Explore 4WD & Adventure
Narva Crimp Terminal Male Blade Red Terminal Entry 6.3 x 0.8mm Heat Shrinkable 20 Pce - 56320BL
2012 Nissan Pulsar Headlights
Headlights are absolutely fitted to the 2012 Nissan Pulsar and are relevant to every service schedule. This aligns with technical requirements under the Australian Design Rules (notably ADR 13/00 and ADR 46/00) and New Zealand’s Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Lighting 2004, which mandate compliant headlamps on road-legal vehicles. Manufacturer documentation for the AU/NZ B17 Pulsar range lists halogen headlamps as standard equipment, so drivers can expect a conventional, serviceable setup.
On the 2012 Pulsar, the headlights do the heavy lifting after dark and in poor weather, helping the driver see the road ahead while making the vehicle easy for others to spot. Low beam handles everyday night driving without dazzling oncoming traffic, while high beam throws extra light down country roads. The assemblies typically include indicators and park lamps, and many cars of this era also run daytime running lights or use low-beam as a DRL function for added daytime visibility.
As part of routine servicing, the headlights deserve a quick health check. Bulbs naturally dim with age, so even before a blow-out, output can drop and the beam can yellow off. Lenses may haze under Aussie and Kiwi UV conditions, reducing clarity, a quality lens polish can bring back sharpness. It’s also worth checking aim—incorrectly aimed lights either waste light or dazzle oncoming traffic, and both ADR and WOF/RWC inspections look closely at this. If there’s moisture inside the housing, a tired seal might need attention before it corrodes terminals or fogs the reflector.
When a bulb needs replacing, owners should match the correct 12 V specification and avoid touching the glass with bare fingers. Sticking with reputable halogen globes maintains legal beam pattern and avoids glare. LED retrofit bulbs in halogen housings are often not compliant for on-road use unless the entire assembly is certified—best to confirm local ADR/WOF rules or fit approved components. If a housing is cracked, an adjuster is seized, or alignment is out, a workshop with a beam-setter will sort it quickly. Adding a headlight check to each service interval keeps night driving safer and helps the Pulsar pass compliance inspections without fuss.
- Clean and inspect lenses at each service, restore UV-dulled plastic as needed.
- Test low and high beam, indicators and park lamps, replace bulbs in pairs for even colour and brightness.
- Have headlight aim verified on a level beam board or with a beam-setter to ADR/WOF standards.
What bulb types does a 2012 Nissan Pulsar use?
Many AU/NZ B17 Pulsars use halogen globes, commonly H11 for low beam and HB3 (9005) for high beam. Variations can occur by trim or build date, so it’s smart to confirm against the owner’s manual, the bulb holder markings, or with the VIN at a parts desk to ensure the right fit.
Are LED bulb upgrades legal on the Pulsar’s standard headlights?
Retrofit LED bulbs in halogen reflector housings are typically not road-legal in Australia or New Zealand unless the complete headlamp assembly is tested and certified to the applicable standards. To stay compliant and avoid glare, use quality halogen replacements or upgrade to an ADR/WOF-approved headlamp unit designed for LED if offered.
How often should headlight aim be checked?
It’s sensible to check aim annually or any time bulbs, springs, suspension height or front-end parts are changed. Workshops can quickly verify alignment with a beam-setter so the Pulsar meets ADR/WOF criteria and delivers maximum light without dazzling other road users.