Has anyone installed non-DOT tail lights prior to safety inspection? I'm looking at some alternative LED type tail lights but they are not "DOT" approved.
Cheers,
Scott
Cheers,
Scott
It's going to depend highly on wher eyou live and your local inspector. If you live in Mississippi, you could probably roll up with some tractor lights duct taped in and pass. It looks like you are in San Diego, I suspect you will have to meet every little iota of the code.Has anyone installed non-DOT tail lights prior to safety inspection? I'm looking at some alternative LED type tail lights but they are not "DOT" approved.
Cheers,
Scott
Ok just move out a commiforniaI kind of figured that because I live in Californickstan I would need to make sure that every light, wire, bolt and nut passes the draconian state requirements. I will most likely have to install the Dakota tail lights and then redo after inspection approval.
Cheers
That is what I was reading in the SB100 as well, but nice to have separate set of eyes to confirm.If you are registering it under SB100 I see no requirement in the rules that state that. My SPF does not have DOT approved lighting or if they are, I see no such markings on them and there are plenty of cars legally registered in Cali. The only person that would check it is the brake and lamp inspector and from what I understand, they only check to see that you have brake lights that actually work.
Just a heads up. E code headlamps are legal here in Canada but not in the USA. Even if your headlights were DOT/SAE they would fail because the plexiglass headlight covers are not DOT stamped. The same goes with the foglight covers.I relooked. My SPF has DOT certified taillights and E9 headlights which I believe are European Union code.