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Tail Light Bulb Issues - Have bulbs changed?
I recently had my left rear tail light burn out - after many, many years of faithful service.
I decided to replace all bulbs at the rear since I was in there. However, when I went to the auto-parts store, the bulb charts did not go back as far as 1974. I asked at the counter and they looked up #1126 and #1127 for my tail lights, blinkers, and brake lights. The bulbs seems to have a loose fit but they worked. After a couple of days, the left blinker stopped working but resumed if I jiggled it. After a couple more days, I discovered that none of the rear lights were working. I looked up on the net & Pelican and I see that the correct bulbs are #7506 and #7528. I returned to a different auto parts store and they did not carry the #75xx bulbs but had a conversion to #1126 & #1127. Has anyone had this problem and if I order the correct bulbs from Pelican, will they have a slightly fatter base as the current bulbs have a very loose fit and I don't recall the old bulbs being that loose - unfortunately, I tossed to old bulbs. Thanks for any advice. |
I had the same problem and found that the Chinese bulbs do not fit well. You need to get the German or Eastern European bulbs. Which are generally not available in the regular auto parts stores
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tail light bulbs
Had same issue with my 1970 914/6 just recently. Check out the thread:
914World.com - The fastest growing online 914 community! Sled |
I have seen that the flexi metal contact tabs get flattened with age and use. Gently bending them back up has worked fine in those cases for me.
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I recall someone in another post mentioning wrapping electric tape around the collar were the base contacts the bulb.
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Need to replace my reverse lights and will be "bulb shopping" soon. I'm assuming the reverse lights and front turn signals all are affected similarly by this?
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Wow I just went through this.
I tried electrical tape but it was too thick. I managed to put a few little pieces of aluminum foil tape on one side to snug it up. It's still working fine. |
Toothpick
Ernie 81sc |
You don't want to use anything that will insulate the base from the socket, it needs contact for ground.
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They are all a BA15 base. The single filament bulb is BA15s and the double filament bulb is a BA15d. There will be several numbers that interchange. I wanted bright as practical but did NOT want LED. 3497 for the single filament and 3496 for the dual filament. If you want to kick up the reverse lights a notch look for a 796 it's a 35W bulb.
I bought all my bulbs from memotronics_llc via eBAy. All bulbs were manufactured by CEC in South Korea. Excelent quality, service and cheap. Here's a link to the eBay store. Just search on the bulb numbers. These bulbs are the ones recommended on the Daniel Stern site as Honda bulbs. There are some threads here if you want to search. I switched all of the bulbs in my car over to these and it made a significant difference in brightness. Not night and day but a difference you can clearly see at night. The increased amp draw is almost nil. I'm running the 796 in my third brake light as well as for reverse lights. I've had these bulbs in my car for about six months now with zero issues. Below is text I cribbed from the net and saved in a word doc. I can't rememeber where I found it but this is what started me researching the above bulb options. Quote:
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You might also look into LED bulbs for those new numbers and see if you find some to your liking. I found some red LED bulbs for my brake lights that work pretty well at the local Auto Zone. |
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I just punted an bought an after market bulb socket and replaced the worn bulb socket that was cast into my taillight assembly. For $2 seems to get the job done.
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