1 New SUPER bright high-quality LED bulbs commonly used in automotive applications, snowmobiles such as Arctic Cat, Ski Doo, John Deere, Polaris, Sno Jet, Yamaha, and motorcycles and 3-wheelers made by Honda and Suzuki, and tractors that use a 12-volt DC single contact bulb (see pictures). This bulb was used in Ford garden tractors in the late 1980s to early 1990's that were produced by Shibaura. such as the Ford LGT-14D, LGT-14H, LGT-14 and LGT-16DThis bulb fits directly into your headlight wiring harness socket. It is brighter, lasts longer, uses less watts (but is 10x brighter per watt), and will not melt your lens if kept on too long. This is a non-polarity bulb so you just plug it in. It's as easy as changing a light bulb. 

This bulb is custom made with a front projection lens, the beam angle is 360 degrees, it has a steel base and an alloy body. One of the brightest bulbs in its class; over 600-700% brighter than a standard bulb!! However, it is the front projections that makes it so effective. It's just a better engineered than other bulbs. 

If you need a different style bulb, please send me a picture we can match it.

Please note: light bulbs are a part of an electrical system in a tractor. For bulbs to function properly components such as electrical system, stator, voltage regulator, and light bulb sockets need to be fully functional. Common malfunctions are: Loose ground wire, bare positive wire causing a short, poor contact between the bulb and light socket, and malfunctioning voltage regulator which would cause high DC voltage or AC voltage getting into the wiring harness and blowing bulbs instantly. 

Ships from a small business in Oklahoma, United States the same or next shipping day via USPS * with free tracking. Buyer pays actual shipping cost. No overcharge. After the first set, all other sets ship at no additional cost.

* Note: First Class shipping is the most cost-effective delivery, however, it is not insured. If you would like your item insured for loss or damage, please select Priority shipping.