Part Description
Triumph Rocket III Touring 09 Bulb Pilot/Parking/Sidelight
Also Available - Spare Bulb Kit
This offers all necessary bulbs and fuses that you will require in any emergency and comes in a compact and stylish impact resistant container, ready for use. Essential kit for travelling around Europe. Set contains a selection of Bulbs and fuses including H4 Headlight, Stop/Tail, Flasher, 20,15 and 10 amp Fuses - here
Delivery and Returns
We want you to be happy with your purchase. If you're not, just return the products to our warehouse. Unless faulty, we'd like this to be within 30 days of purchase. Exceptions apply to certain products.
12 Volt Bulbs
6 Volt Bulbs
Emergency Bulb Kits
Motorcycle Light Bulbs
- 6 or 12 Volt The vast majority of motorcycles since the 1970s have had 12 Volt systems. By the 1980s 6 volt systems were unusual on all but smaller CC and off-road motorcycles. Bulbs are usually marked with their voltage and wattage. Either scribed on the metal section or printed on the glass. 6 Volt batteries have 3 cells and 12 Volt batteries 6 cells.
- Headlights On very early Motorcycles Headlight were powered by acetylene gas. Electrically powered headlights were not commonly introduced until the late 1920s. First use in the 1960s, the Halogen bulb came into common use in the 1980s.
- Incandescent light bulb This is the common type of filament bulb and creates light by incandescence. An electrical current passes through a thin filament, heating it and causing it to become excited, releasing thermally equilibrated photons in the process "Light". The enclosing glass bulb prevents the oxygen in the air from reaching the hot filament, which otherwise would be destroyed rapidly by oxidation.
- LED Bulbs are increasingly being adopted for signalling functions such as parking lamps, brake lamps and turn signals as well as Daytime Running Lamps, and in those applications offer significant advantages over filament bulbs. These include low energy consumption, long life, and resistance to vibration.