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Doug Kanter June 10th 04 06:17 PM

Boat trailer lights
 

"CCred68046" wrote in message
...
Note: The dude at West Marine said that the DOT of Florida has not

approved
of LED lights on boat trailers. I can't say that I've seen them around,

as
anyone else, living in FLA?


I find that really hard to believe as most of the semis these days are

running
LED's.


....not to mention how many traffic lights are being converted to LED lately.



Doug Kanter June 10th 04 06:22 PM

Boat trailer lights
 

"Camilo" wrote in message
...

"mono sect" wrote

Note: The dude at West Marine said that the DOT of Florida has not

approved
of LED lights on boat trailers. I can't say that I've seen them around,

as
anyone else, living in FLA?



I wonder if this means:
(a) that the state hasn't approved them for manufacture and/or sale of new
trailers,
(b) that law enforcement will ticket the use of them if they observe them

on
the highway
(c) both
(d)neither

I would think, in practical terms - (a) only. I wouldn't think a cop

would
distinguish or ticket any form of functioning trailer lights - as long as
they appear to be functional and adequate for the purpose. JMHO, and

really
I don't know.

I do know that where I live all the traffic lights have switched over to
LED. All new custom emergency vehicles, like fire and EMS trucks, are
spec'ing LED tail lights. For both, they are more expensive up front, but
felt to be worth it because they are not only less maintenance intensive,
but felt to be safer because of significantly quicker "light up" when
activated compared to a filament light. I'm seeing more and more

commercial
trucks with LED tail lights as well.

If they're more waterproof (I mean less susceptible to the problems

caused
by submersion), I'll switch next time I need new tail lights in my boat
trailer, regardless of official regulations - back to my opinion above.
--
Cam



Check out SeaSense LED lights. Someone here recommended them to me a couple
of weeks back. Bought 'em. The internal assembly is potted, meaning that
after the LEDs are assembed and soldered/wired, the back is filled with an
epoxy to completely seal the circuit board. Very nice. The link below is the
only vendor I found for these lights.

www.unifiedmarine.com/index.html



NOYB June 10th 04 06:23 PM

Boat trailer lights
 

"Doug Kanter" wrote in message
...


...not to mention how many traffic lights are being converted to LED

lately.


Are they FDOT approved? ;-)



Doug Kanter June 10th 04 06:29 PM

Boat trailer lights
 

"NOYB" wrote in message
...

"Doug Kanter" wrote in message
...


...not to mention how many traffic lights are being converted to LED

lately.


Are they FDOT approved? ;-)



Only if the approval process doesn't require your people to read, or deal
with punch cards.



NOYB June 10th 04 07:31 PM

Boat trailer lights
 

"Doug Kanter" wrote in message
...

"NOYB" wrote in message
...

"Doug Kanter" wrote in message
...


...not to mention how many traffic lights are being converted to LED

lately.


Are they FDOT approved? ;-)



Only if the approval process doesn't require your people to read, or deal
with punch cards.


*My* people are on the West coast of Florida. We read and punch chads just
fine.



Paul Schilter June 11th 04 12:05 AM

Boat trailer lights
 
NOYB,
Who cares if their DOT approved, do YOU approve. :-)
Paul

"NOYB" wrote in message
...

"Doug Kanter" wrote in message
...


...not to mention how many traffic lights are being converted to LED

lately.


Are they FDOT approved? ;-)





mono sect June 11th 04 01:26 PM

Boat trailer lights
 

"NOYB" wrote in message
link.net...

"Doug Kanter" wrote in message
...

"NOYB" wrote in message
...

"Doug Kanter" wrote in message
...


...not to mention how many traffic lights are being converted to LED
lately.


Are they FDOT approved? ;-)



Only if the approval process doesn't require your people to read, or

deal
with punch cards.


*My* people are on the West coast of Florida. We read and punch chads

just
fine.


It's the 'Liberally' challenged in Miami/Dade he's speaking of






mono sect June 11th 04 01:29 PM

Boat trailer lights
 
This be duh one I gotz
http://unifiedmarine.com/cgi-bin/htm...08625105277277



"Doug Kanter" wrote in message
...

"Camilo" wrote in message
...

"mono sect" wrote

Note: The dude at West Marine said that the DOT of Florida has not

approved
of LED lights on boat trailers. I can't say that I've seen them

around,
as
anyone else, living in FLA?



I wonder if this means:
(a) that the state hasn't approved them for manufacture and/or sale of

new
trailers,
(b) that law enforcement will ticket the use of them if they observe

them
on
the highway
(c) both
(d)neither

I would think, in practical terms - (a) only. I wouldn't think a cop

would
distinguish or ticket any form of functioning trailer lights - as long

as
they appear to be functional and adequate for the purpose. JMHO, and

really
I don't know.

I do know that where I live all the traffic lights have switched over to
LED. All new custom emergency vehicles, like fire and EMS trucks, are
spec'ing LED tail lights. For both, they are more expensive up front,

but
felt to be worth it because they are not only less maintenance

intensive,
but felt to be safer because of significantly quicker "light up" when
activated compared to a filament light. I'm seeing more and more

commercial
trucks with LED tail lights as well.

If they're more waterproof (I mean less susceptible to the problems

caused
by submersion), I'll switch next time I need new tail lights in my boat
trailer, regardless of official regulations - back to my opinion above.
--
Cam



Check out SeaSense LED lights. Someone here recommended them to me a

couple
of weeks back. Bought 'em. The internal assembly is potted, meaning that
after the LEDs are assembed and soldered/wired, the back is filled with an
epoxy to completely seal the circuit board. Very nice. The link below is

the
only vendor I found for these lights.

www.unifiedmarine.com/index.html





mono sect June 11th 04 01:30 PM

Boat trailer lights
 

"James Gemmill" gemmilljim@hotmail,com wrote in message
...
Thanks all. Found 'em at Walmart for $10.99. Pakckage includes
gasket, light and new plug.


Went conventional huh?



On Wed, 9 Jun 2004 17:13:46 -0500, "Andy K."
wrote:

Let me guess, red lens, rubber gastket and three pins on the back.
Check your local truck stop also. Those lights used to be standard on big
rig trailers.

"James Gemmill" gemmilljim@hotmail,com wrote in message
.. .
Thanks, I found them at Overton's for about $13. Will check the local
NAPA today.

On Tue, 8 Jun 2004 22:43:04 -0400, "fiddler"
wrote:

James, The whole light fixture has to be changed if the bulbs are

blown.
"Truck Light" is a brand name and is commonly used in trailer

applications.
Any trailer supply store should carry them. Or if you are lucky a

local
automotive parts store will have them. Just take the light with you

when
you
go. I would not recommend buying then from a marina! These are common

lights
and they are going to be over-priced at a marina. Just call around to

some
local supply houses and you are sure to run across them.
Andy
"James Gemmill" gemmilljim@hotmail,com wrote in message
.. .
The lights on my boat trailer are sort of built in. They are
installed with a rubber gasket. The fixture itself says Truck

Light.
When I unplug it and remove the fixture there seems to be no way to
change a bulb.
Any ideas?







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