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Side lights

Riverswale

Grenadier Owner
Local time
1:57 PM
Joined
May 7, 2025
Messages
3
Location
Richmondshire
Hi. This may sound a daft question. Is it possible to leave the side lights on (front and rear) without the ignition being on. I have tried but as soon as the ignition key is removed everything switches off except the follow me home lights ?. Would be useful when parking in an expose place.
 
It's a bit strange, the owners manual talks about the parking lights, but they do turn off when you lock with the key fob.


If you lock with the key they work as expected and the side lights stay on.
Nothing in the manual about that!
 
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Yes, it is strange. I left mine on accidentally the other day and was surprised to find them off when I returned. See also this thread from some time ago, which ran for three pages and concluded nothing:


Contrary to comments in the above thread it is still a legal requirement in the UK to leave sidelights or parking lights illuminated when parked in the normal direction of traffic at night on a road with a speed limit in excess of 30mph and I believe that the UK Construction & Use Regulations require parking/side lights to be fitted.

I am taking my car in for its first service on Wednesday and if I remember will ask the dealer if he knows the situation. It does appear that there has been a change in specification, possibly unintentional.
 
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Yes, it is strange. I left mine on accidentally the other day and was surprised to find them off when I returned. See also this thread from some time ago, which ran for three pages and concluded nothing:


Contrary to comments in the above thread it is still a legal requirement in the UK to leave sidelights or parking lights illuminated when parked in the normal direction of traffic at night on a road with a speed limit in excess of 30mph and I believe that the UK Construction & Use Regulations require parking/side lights to be fitted.

I am taking my car in for its first service on Wednesday and if I remember will ask the dealer if he knows the situation. It does appear that there has been a change in specification, possibly unintentional.
I've seen a similar thread elsewhere when the potential of failing an MOT for not having functioning parking lights was raised. The conclusion via a current MOT examiner was: a) in the UK parking outside a 30mph zone at night legally requires parking lights to be on. b) parking lights in modern cars are NOT a legal requirement. c) if your car has parking lights they are subject to MOT testing and must work or is a test failure. Conclusion, modern cars without parking lights can not legally park on the carriageway outside a 30mph limit at night.
 
I've just checked the MoT Testers' Manual and there is no requirement to check that any vehicle lights can operate with the engine stopped. There is of course no mention of "parking lights" as such since the law requires only "mandatory position lamps" and "mandatory end-outline marker lamps" and it would be one or other of these serving the function of parking lights, but as far as the MoT Test is concerned the tester mentioned above is correct.

I have also checked The Road Vehicles Lighting Regulations 1989 (as amended) and can confirm that Regulation 24 (1) (b) states that "no person shall .... allow to remain at rest, or cause or permit to be allowed to remain at rest, on a road any vehicle between sunset and sunrise unless every front position lamp, rear position lamp, rear registration plate lamp, side marker lamp and end-outline marker lamp with which the vehicle is required by these Regulations to be fitted is kept lit and unobscured." There are certain specific exceptions including roads with speed limits of 30mph or less, parking areas, etc., but the general regulation is as quoted.

It follows from this that as Eric rightly surmises, it would be illegal to park a Grenadier and leave it parked on a road with a speed limit greater than 30mph unless the ignition remained on (remembering that it is now another specific offense to leave the engine running unnecessarily when stationary*). It would not however fail the MoT test for the inability to leave the sidelights on.

* I imagine that you could argue that the need to comply with the RVLR(1989) made the running of the engine necessary.
 
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Not checked on my Grenadier yet, but a lot of cars use the indicator stalk to turn parking lights on so that the road side lights only are on and less of a battery drain. So inefect, indicate which side of the vehicle you wish the lights to remain on and 🤞it might work.
 
Not checked on my Grenadier yet, but a lot of cars use the indicator stalk to turn parking lights on so that the road side lights only are on and less of a battery drain. So inefect, indicate which side of the vehicle you wish the lights to remain on and 🤞it might work.
That relates to the old parking at night in a built up area, ie 30mph, where it was necessary to leave a single side parking light on. That was repealled decades ago, as reflectors were deemed acceptable in lower speeds limits. Outside a 30mph limit both side/ parking lights must remain on, front ant rear.
 
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