-40%
New Lucas British Prefocus 12-Volt 48-Watt LLB323Y AMBER FOG Bulb Pair
$ 19.93
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
New 2 Each, LUCAS 12-Volt / 48-Watt British Prefocus (BPF) AMBER FOG Lamp Incandescent Bulbs.The price listed is for 2 bulbs.
These are Single-Filament/Single-Contact Lucas LLB323Y AMBER Glass Incandescent Bulbs.
The Bulb Pair are in individual boxes.
The LLB323Y Amber Bulb is interchangeable with Generic 600 BPF Bulbs.
The Drawing is shown as a Clear bulb, but it is the same dimensions as the Amber bulb.
This Bulb type has many "Amber Fog Light" applicatons such as fiting the following Vintage Lucas FT Lights:
SFT462, WFT462
SFT4, WFT4
SFT576, WFT576
SFT5 (Fog Ranger), WFT5 (Fog Ranger)
SFT700S (Flamethrower), WFT700S (Flamethrower)
Notes: SFT =
Spigot Flat Throw
, WFT =
Wing Flat Throw
The # after the Prefix = Size in Inches, with a decimal point understood.
The LLB323Y Bulb is
Only
for "FOG" Light use. Not for Lucas LR (Long Range) "Spot "Lights or other brand Spot Lights.
The LLB323Y Bulb filament is
Horizonal
(transverse) to the Bulb Base top. A Spot/Driving Bulb filament would be
Vertical
(axial) to the Bulb Base top.
Courtesy
Optional BPF Info:
6-Volt / 36-Watt Clear "Fog" Bulb #160 (or) #173
6-Volt / 36-Watt
Amber
"Fog" Bulb #660
6-Volt / 36-Watt Clear "Spot" Bulb #172
6-Volt / 36-Watt
Amber
"Spot" Bulb #659
6-Volt / 55-Watt Clear "Fog/Spot" Bulb #454 (Halogen)
12-Volt / 38-Watt Clear "Fog" Bulb #325 (Sometimes Headlight use)
12-Volt / 48-Watt Clear "Fog" Bulb #323 (or) LLB323
12-Volt / 48-Watt Clear "Spot" Bulb #P185H (Halogen)
12-Volt /
48-Watt
Amber
"Fog" Bulb
#323Y, LLB323Y
(or)
#600
12-Volt / 48-Watt Clear "Spot" Bulb #185
12-Volt / 48-Watt
Amber
"Spot" Bulb #685
12-Volt / 55-Watt Clear "Fog" Bulb #450 (Halogen)
Who invented the Incandescent Light Bulb?
Many people contributed to the invention. British scientist Humphrey Davy was able to produce the world's first true artificial electric light in 1802.
British inventor Joseph Swan in 1879 patented the first successful long term electric bulb. A year later, it is generally known that American Thomas Edison first made it practical.
Shipping Weight: 6 ounces (170 g)