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Parts for your 2015 Nissan Pulsar-Tail lights

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2015 Nissan Pulsar tail-lights — purpose, maintenance and replacement in Australia and New Zealand

Tail-lights are absolutely fitted and legally required on the 2015 Nissan Pulsar (C12). This is supported by core technical sources: Nissan’s Owner’s/Service Manual for the Pulsar details the rear combination lamp assembly and bulbs, Australian Design Rules ADR 13/00 (Installation of Lighting and Light‑signalling Devices) and ADR 49/00 (Front and Rear Position Lamps, Stop Lamps and End‑outline Marker Lamps) mandate red rear position lamps, and the NZ Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Lighting 2004 requires operational tail-lights. So, yes — the 2015 Pulsar uses tail-lights and must have them functioning for road use.

On the Pulsar, the tail-lights are built into the rear combination lamps. Their main job is simple but critical: make the car visible from behind at night and in low-visibility conditions. When the park lamps or headlights are on, the tail-lights glow red so following drivers can clearly see the vehicle’s position and width. Depending on trim, the Pulsar may use conventional bulbs or integrated LED elements, either way, the tail function is separate from (but housed with) the stop, indicator and reverse lamps.

Good servicing practice is to include a quick tail-light check at each service interval (typically 10,000–15,000 km) and before long trips. A basic walk‑around with the park lamps on confirms both sides illuminate evenly. If one side is out or dim, check the bulb (if fitted), the relevant fuse, and the lamp earth. Trailer wiring faults can also cause gremlins.

For bulb-equipped Pulsars, replacement is straightforward and covered in the Nissan manual. Open the boot, remove the trim access, undo the lamp fasteners, twist the bulb holder anti‑clockwise, and swap in the correct bulb and wattage as specified by Nissan. Avoid touching the glass on halogen bulbs, use a tissue or gloves. Refit securely and test before closing up. If the vehicle uses LED tail-lights, the service item is usually the complete lamp assembly rather than a bulb, though LEDs typically last much longer.

Keeping the lenses clean helps visibility. Wash with mild car shampoo, not abrasives. A light film of condensation can be normal after rain, but standing water or persistent fogging points to a seal issue — worth fixing to protect the electrics. All of this aligns with manufacturer guidance in the Pulsar’s exterior lighting instructions and the lighting performance expected by ADRs and NZ lighting rules.

  • Check operation regularly and before night drives.
  • Use only Nissan‑specified bulb types/wattage where applicable.
  • Inspect seals and wiring if a lamp is dim or intermittent.

Popular questions about 2015 Nissan Pulsar tail-lights

What bulb type does the 2015 Pulsar use for the tail-light?
Depending on trim and market, the Pulsar may use a dual‑function bulb for tail/stop or an LED module. The correct specification (base type and wattage) is listed in the Nissan Owner’s Manual for the C12 Pulsar under Exterior lights. Using the exact spec avoids dim output, error messages, or heat damage. Parts counters can match it accurately from the VIN or rego.

One tail-light is dimmer than the other — what’s the likely cause?
Common culprits are a tired bulb (if bulb‑equipped), a poor earth connection at the lamp, or corrosion on the bulb holder. Occasionally, a mismatched bulb wattage causes uneven brightness. For LED variants, dim output may indicate internal lamp failure and the whole rear combination lamp usually needs replacement.

Can LED replacement bulbs be fitted to make the tail-lights brighter?
Only if they meet the requirements in ADR 13/00/49/00 (AU) or the NZ Vehicle Lighting Rule and are suitable for the Pulsar’s reflector/optics. Many generic LED “retrofit” bulbs in halogen housings don’t produce the correct beam or intensity and may be non‑compliant. Sticking to OEM‑equivalent parts or approved LED assemblies keeps it legal and reliable.

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