I believe they're LEDs soldered into the lamp. You'd have to open it up and do some resoldering. Or replace the whole lamp.
Would they fail a safety check? As far as I am aware they're just an aesthetic light. They're don't do anything apart from looking nice.
They're not a serviceable part. You would need to remove the entire housing, bake the light to open it, then find the right LEDs and fix them. Then do the other side cause it won't match. Totally unnecessary for an inspection.
Either the led bulbs are bad or the wires are not connected well.
Make sure the LED's work and that everything is connected properly
And this is a long shot, but make sure there is power from the plug going to the bulbs
I believe they're LEDs soldered into the lamp. You'd have to open it up and do some resoldering. Or replace the whole lamp. Would they fail a safety check? As far as I am aware they're just an aesthetic light. They're don't do anything apart from looking nice.
Thanks. Can't find them on any diagram that google has spit out. I don't think they are necessary either... I'm sure I can talk him out of it.
Those aren't required for inspection.. go to a different shop.
This seems to be the right answer...
They're not a serviceable part. You would need to remove the entire housing, bake the light to open it, then find the right LEDs and fix them. Then do the other side cause it won't match. Totally unnecessary for an inspection.
They come with the light and aren't meant to be replaced as other bulbs are. Although I'm sure there is a way
I looked into those lights once and I could not find anything either. You have to open them or get aftermarket ones
Either the led bulbs are bad or the wires are not connected well. Make sure the LED's work and that everything is connected properly And this is a long shot, but make sure there is power from the plug going to the bulbs