Description
Running equipment in the early morning or after dark with a missing marker light is asking for trouble. This right-hand front marker lamp fits a wide range of tractors, making it the go-to replacement when you need to stay visible and legal. Whether you’re operating a Case Puma, New Holland T7, or Steyr Profi, this universal-fit marker light gets you back to safe operation without hunting for model-specific parts that cost twice as much.
What You’re Getting
- Universal compatibility across Case, New Holland, and Steyr tractors
- DOT-approved amber lens for legal road transport operations
- Tough housing that flexes instead of shattering when hit by branches or equipment
- Sealed design keeps water out, eliminating that common failure where your marker light fills up like a goldfish bowl
- Universal mounting pattern means this light drops right in where your old one came out, regardless of which tractor you’re working on
Built for Real Farm Work
Here’s the beauty of this marker lamp – it fits nearly everything in your shed. Got an older Case Maxxum for hay work and a newer New Holland T7 for row crops? Same marker light fits both. Running a mixed fleet with some Steyr tractors in the mix? This light has you covered. No more keeping different part numbers straight or ordering the wrong light because the dealer’s computer shows seventeen different options. This universal design means you can keep a spare on the shelf and know it’ll fit whatever tractor needs it next.
Made to Last
These marker lights live a hard life – getting blasted by pressure washers, smacked by branches, and baked by sun all summer. This replacement is built to handle it all with a tough housing that flexes instead of shattering and a lens that stays clear instead of yellowing. Whether it’s mounted on your 20-year-old Case doing loader work or your newer T7 pulling implements, this light is built to last.
Installation Notes
Check your wiring before blaming the light – corroded connectors cause more failures than bad bulbs. A shot of contact cleaner and some dielectric grease usually brings “dead” lights back to life. If you’re switching from an old incandescent to LED bulb (highly recommended for longevity), you might need a load resistor to keep your flasher relay happy. Pro tip: buy two of these – if your right marker failed, the left one probably isn’t far behind, and having a spare on hand beats making an emergency parts run during planting season.






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