The Victory Cross Country headlight bulb uses H11 and D1R sizes for both high and low beam applications. The replacement chart covers 2010 to 2017 production years with corresponding bulb size specifications.
The year-by-year compatibility chart below provides a quick reference to verify the correct bulb size for your vehicle.
The H11 is the dominant bulb type across the Victory Cross Country headlight specifications, covering both high beam and low beam positions for the 2010-2011 and 2014-2017 model years, as well as the halogen capsule headlamp configuration for 2012-2013.
The H11 is a single-filament halogen bulb operating at 12V and 55W, built to ECE standards with a PGJ19-2 base. Despite its ECE origin, it carries approval for use in the United States as well.
The 2012-2013 Victory Cross Country introduced an optional HID headlamp system alongside the standard halogen configuration, making those two model years the only ones in the specifications to carry dual bulb type entries per lighting position.
When the 2012-2013 models were equipped with HID headlamps, both the high beam and low beam positions required the D1R bulb rather than the H11, meaning the two bulb types are not interchangeable between headlamp system variants.
The D1R is a high-intensity discharge (xenon) bulb rated at 85V and 35W, with a PK32d-3 base and an integral ignitor built into the bulb assembly. It is specifically designed for reflector-type housings, which distinguishes it from projector-compatible HID types such as the D1S.
Because the D1R incorporates an integral ignitor, it does not require a separate external ignitor unit, unlike some other HID bulb formats. This design is a fixed characteristic of the D1R standard.
The H11 and D1R operate on fundamentally different electrical systems. The H11 runs on a standard 12V vehicle circuit, while the D1R requires 85V, which is generated by a dedicated HID ballast. Substituting one type for the other is not electrically or physically compatible.
For the 2014-2017 model years, both the high beam and low beam positions share the same H11 specification, indicating a single-bulb-type headlamp system with no HID variant listed for those years.