Legality of LED bulbs?
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Discussion

The_Gza

Original Poster:

592 posts

274 months

Friday 3rd September 2004
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One for our more learned friends - are the LED versions of the usual stop/tail/side light bulbs legal?

If not, is there a particular reason for this? Is it simply they haven't been formally 'approved' or tested to see if they reach the relevant standard? Or is there an inherent 'fault' with LED bulbs that make them more dangerous than normal filament type bulbs?

FWIW I'd have thought given they react quicker and in a cluster you're less likely to get a total failure, they'd be better than the traditional filament bulbs. Possibly evidenced by the fact you're seeing more cars with them fitted as standard now (mostly exec mobiles).

Thoughts?

Pigeon

18,535 posts

269 months

Friday 3rd September 2004
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There is no "inherent fault" with LEDs that makes them "more dangerous" than filament bulbs. I can think of at least three reasons why they're safer: they don't blow; because they don't blow they can be soldered in place, so no dysfunctionality due to bad connections; and if the lens of the lamp gets damaged they still show the right colour.

They certainly used to be illegal due to complete moronic stupidity on the part of the legislators, who would prefer us to use a device that can fail without warning at any time. However given the number of vehicles now using them - Birmingham and Bedford buses all have LED stop/tail/indicator lights now - I would assume that some sense has been battered into their thick skulls. Why it has taken 30 years for this to happen is another question.

hertsbiker

6,443 posts

294 months

Friday 3rd September 2004
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Some of the aftermarket LED side light's blow really quick. I'd had 4 go after only a few hours, so that represents crap value. Gone back to proper bulbs, lots cheaper, lots brighter, and legal.

cptsideways

13,831 posts

275 months

Friday 3rd September 2004
quotequote all
hertsbiker said:
Some of the aftermarket LED side light's blow really quick. I'd had 4 go after only a few hours, so that represents crap value. Gone back to proper bulbs, lots cheaper, lots brighter, and legal.


I agree I have a set that have gone in only a few months

jimbro1000

1,619 posts

307 months

Friday 3rd September 2004
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cptsideways said:

hertsbiker said:
Some of the aftermarket LED side light's blow really quick. I'd had 4 go after only a few hours, so that represents crap value. Gone back to proper bulbs, lots cheaper, lots brighter, and legal.


I agree I have a set that have gone in only a few months


I use LED cluster lamps on the racecar and they have lasted very well despite all the abuse but exactly the same items on my friends car (he was so impressed with mine he wanted a copy) lasted just 4 races. The reason though is simple, I built my system to include a controller box that limits the voltage to about 11.5V max while his runs at full voltage (upto about 13.5V). When they actually failed I was behind him on the grid and you could see segments (5 seperate LEDS in each segment) flicker and then fail until nothing was left. At £10 per cluster that gets quite expensive but as soon as he fits the controller I built for him (but he couldnt be bothered with) they will last indefinitely.

Pigeon

18,535 posts

269 months

Saturday 4th September 2004
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Sheee-yit can't you buy anything well made these days.

The LEDs on my bike are fed from constant current sources. No brightness variation with dynamo revs and no overcurrent failures.

dazfoz

18 posts

259 months

Saturday 4th September 2004
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Is it still the case with the flashing "Cat's eye" LED for cycles, these are vastly more visible yet my mate got pulled and told to get a 'proper' bulb light set.

(serves him right for riding a bicycle)

bry460y

5 posts

260 months

Saturday 4th September 2004
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LAW STATES. SOLID WHITE LIGHT AT THE FRONT ONLY.SO FLASHING LIGHT IS ILEGAL.

Streetcop

5,907 posts

261 months

Saturday 4th September 2004
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For cycles the light has to be steady, if fixed to the bike.

However, flashing LED's can be affixed to clothing or rucksacks for example.

Having said that, I'd be absolutely amazed if a Bib stopped a cyclist at night who was displaying a flashing LED to point out the legality of it.

Street

philthy

4,697 posts

263 months

Saturday 4th September 2004
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I saw a cyclist the other night with one of those LED things. It was bloody bright I can tell you, much better than the old pifco I used to have on my bike when I were a lad !
....ah nostalgia.....
Phil

nightmare

5,277 posts

307 months

Saturday 4th September 2004
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we were too poor to have a proper Chopper or Grifter. I had a 'Cheetah' instead....very dodgy copy as I recall! nice colour mind

sadako

7,080 posts

261 months

Saturday 4th September 2004
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Cant just whack an LED in place of a filament bulb. You need to restrict the current flowing through them to 300mA if i recall. I wonder if they include protection resistors to some of these after market plug in bulbs?

When i finally migrate to a low profile car i'd naturaly want to have sidelights that dont reflect infra red light. What better way than to use something that needs no parabolic reflector...

mojocvh

16,837 posts

285 months

Saturday 4th September 2004
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Yeah previous thread about LED lights had links to firms selling LED clusters with current limiting resistors already set up.......

MoJo.

Pigeon

18,535 posts

269 months

Saturday 4th September 2004
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sadako said:
Cant just whack an LED in place of a filament bulb. You need to restrict the current flowing through them to 300mA if i recall. I wonder if they include protection resistors to some of these after market plug in bulbs?

300mA is correct for the 1-watt "Lumileds" I have on my MZ (absolute maximum 350mA). These things are so bright you only need one of them. "Ordinary" LEDs like the things used in bicycle lights generally run at 20mA, occasionally 30. The things that plug in in place of a filament bulb are a cluster of "ordinary" LEDs with current limiting resistors, but it appears from some of the posts on this thread that the w*nkers make the resistors of too low a value.

lazy_b

388 posts

259 months

Sunday 5th September 2004
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There's no reason why properly made LED bulbs shouldn't be legal.

However, most pikey LED replacement bulbs are built with inferior components, so (a) don't conform with "E" mark specificaions, and (b) fail more often than real "E" marked filament bulbs.

I'll be first in the queue,as soon as there's an "E" marked LED lamp generally available....

medicineman

1,817 posts

260 months

Sunday 5th September 2004
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So all new 3 series beemers have led rear lights? Are these illegal?

>> Edited by medicineman on Monday 6th September 00:15

john_p

7,073 posts

273 months

Monday 6th September 2004
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Mercedes SL and BMW 7-series have LED-based rear light clusters also.

They have European type approval I guess, E-marked, which ensures they are legal. Similarly the 'brake force display' feature the 3 series has, was only recently granted type approval and I guess you will start to see cars fitted with them soon.