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Parts for your 2017 Toyota Crown-Tail lights
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LED Autolamps 12V LED Stop/Tail/Indicator Lamp With Reflex Reflector White Background - 150BAR
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Repco 12V LED RearCombination Lamp Stop / Tail / Indicator / Licence Plate Pair 150x80x25mm - RLT150LBL2S3
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Repco 12V LED Rear Combination Lamp Stop / Tail / Indicator Pair 100x100x25mm - RLT100BL2S3
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LED Autolamps Rear combination L/R tail lights with sequential indicator, Chrome, Twin Blister - 355ARWM-2
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LED Autolamps 12V Stop/Tail/Indicator/License Plate Boat Trailer Lamp, Right Side - 207BARL4P
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LED Autolamps Multi Volt Stop/Tail/Indicator/Reverse/Reflector LHS & RHS Diffused Tail Light - 284ARWM-2
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Repco 12V LED Rear Combination Lamp Stop / Tail / Indicator / Licence Plate Pair 100x100x25mm - RLT100LBL2S3
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Hella DuraLED 12/24V LED Rear Stop/Tail Lamp, Horizontal/Vertical Mount - 2330BULK
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OEX Rear LED Combo Taillight 12V - Stop/Tail/Reverse/Indicator/Reflector - LLX94013
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2017 Toyota Crown taillights — what they do and how to look after them
Taillights are absolutely fitted to the 2017 Toyota Crown (S210 series). Technical sources including the Toyota Crown Owner’s Manual and Repair Manual (S210), plus lighting regulations such as UN ECE R7/ADR 49/00 and the NZTA Vehicle Lighting Rule 2004, all describe and require rear position lamps on road vehicles. The 2017 Crown uses rear combination lamps — typically LED for tail/stop, with indicator and reverse as LED or incandescent depending on trim — so taillights are very much relevant on this model.
On a 2017 Toyota Crown, the taillights serve a few key jobs. They keep the vehicle visible from behind at night and in poor weather, show braking with a brighter red output, display turns via amber indicators, and illuminate when the headlights or park lamps are on. That keeps the Crown compliant with Aussie ADRs and NZ lighting rules and, more importantly, keeps everyone safer on the road.
For day-to-day care, owners will notice these units are largely maintenance-free, particularly where LEDs are used. Even so, regular checks are smart: a quick walk-around before a night drive, or every few thousand kilometres, helps pick up a failed globe, dim LED segment, or a cracked lens that could let water in. If the Crown is a grey import, ensuring the taillights meet local colour and brightness requirements is worth a look, especially if aftermarket lenses have been fitted.
- Cleaning: Use mild car wash and a soft cloth, avoid harsh solvents that haze the lens.
- Fogging/condensation: Light misting after rain can be normal. Pooling water or persistent fogging points to a compromised seal or vent — replace the gasket or the lamp assembly.
- Bulb vs LED: Incandescent bulbs (if fitted for indicators or reverse) are inexpensive and easy to swap, always match the correct wattage and cap type listed in the owner’s manual. LED tail/stop sections are sealed, if a segment fails, replacement is typically the complete lamp assembly.
- Replacement basics: Open the boot, remove the trim clips or covers, unplug the harness, then undo the mounting nuts (often 10 mm). Lift the lamp straight back to protect the locating pins. Inspect and replace the foam gasket, refit, and test all functions before refitting trim.
- Electrical checks: If a bulb-out warning appears or a lamp is dim, check earth points and connectors for corrosion. Use OEM-quality parts with ADR/NZ compliance marks.
Servicing the Crown’s taillights during routine maintenance — clean, test, and repair as needed — helps keep visibility sharp and avoids roadworthy hassles.
Are the 2017 Toyota Crown’s taillights LED or conventional bulbs?
Most 2017 Crowns run LED rear combination lamps for tail and stop functions, with indicators and reverse varying by grade. Some trims keep incandescent indicators/reverse, while higher-spec variants use full LED. Checking the owner’s manual or the part label on the lamp confirms the exact setup. This matters because LEDs are usually a full assembly replacement, while bulbs can be swapped individually and cheaply.
Why do the Crown’s taillights mist up, and is it normal?
A light film of condensation after rain or a wash is common and typically clears as the lamp warms. Persistent fogging, visible droplets, or water pooling indicates a leak through a cracked lens, perished gasket, or blocked vent. Replacing the gasket or the whole unit (for sealed LED assemblies) restores proper sealing and brightness.
Can aftermarket taillights be fitted in Australia or New Zealand?
They can, provided they meet ADR/NZTA lighting rules for colour, intensity, and visibility. Look for compliance markings and avoid overly smoked lenses that reduce output. Ensure plug-and-play looms are pinned correctly and test tail, brake, indicator, reverse, and rear fog (if fitted) before hitting the road.