nozferatu said:
NORTON, that kit you got from Amazon...was it easy to install and replace the stock bulbs? Was there anything special do to? Cutting, etc?
Besides the bad pattern, ......
Thanks
Buddy,
What do you mean "besides the pattern"?????
Someone would be a Royal A-hole to knowingly drive with their headlights putting out a dangerous/obnoxious head light pattern. These people are out there now.
Most of the unsafe, inconsiderate jerks are using
any HID bulb that fits in the headlight assembly. A lot of them are running around with their goofy bluish lights on High Beams all the time.
I had one behind me in dark rush hour stop and go traffic one time. He was lighting up all the highway signs and blinding everyone.I like to think they don't last long before getting stopped and fined. Wishful thinking?.....
Please be a good guy and do not use the LED system I posted above.
It's unsafe.
noz,
Here's what you can do to help this subject. Others can join in this search. Buy one of these sets ▼ and post detailed pictures. Garage door pictures with one side stock, please. (It's funny how reviews show pictures of the front of the car with the headlights on. That is not a useful picture.)
I was in touch with the seller and they are good with returns if the pattern is wrong. There are a lot of H13 LED's. It's the pattern they produce that matters. Watch for return policy. And, PLEASE, don't be one of those guys that drives around with crappy aftermarket headlights.
http://smile.amazon.com/OPT7-Headlight-Bulbs-Clear-Arc-Beam/dp/B00VNBDWPK/ref=sr_1_1?s=automotive&ie=UTF8&qid=1440851240&sr=1-1&keywords=led+headlights&pebp=1440851257728&perid=0G48XWV2TFY34CMYTVDS
Or this $46 ebay set. 'Buyer pays return shipping': http://www.ebay.com/itm/2-x-Cree-High-Power-60W-9008-H13-LED-Headlight-Kit-6000K-White-Hi-LO-Beam-Lights-/291543214430?hash=item43e154695e&vxp=mtr
It is amazing how normal H13's work. There is no actual reflector in the bulb, just the two Hi/Lo filaments a small distance apart. The headlight assembly creates the pattern.
With the LED's there is a Hi/Lo element on opposite sides. It needs to be clocked in at the correct angle so the pattern is correct. If they made the angle adjustable the previous set would have worked fine. It's the luck of the draw with all the LED's out there.
One LED seller said the pulsed DRL voltage would not work with their LED's. Be sure to test the LED's daytime and night. They might need capacitors added if they don't work as DRL.
OK, seriously...
I am on track to testing an HID system that looks good in initial testing. I'll post results soon.
I have a set of 35 watt HID Hi/Low 4300k bulbs. This is the kind that actually moves the HID capsule mechanically, in and out, with a solenoid action in the base.
I pulled up to a wall with the stock headlights and marked on the wall the upper and lower parts of the pattern of the low and high beams.
Then I set up a test rig to power one 35 watt HID ballast and a Hi/Lo bulb with a way to switch from low to high beams.
It looked like it had very decent patterns low and high !!
I just got the relay kit to make this work normally. I'll be testing it tomorrow on one side only to compare patterns.
The issues are:
1. Will the relay remain engaged when the low beam power is a Pulsed DC (DRL's). A small capacitor would stabilize the the relay if it tries to chatter on DRL.
2. This relay kit has one power wire/fuse going to a 12V source and one original headlight connector. The relay can control two ballasts and bulbs and the two small connectors that handle the Hi/Lo solenoids on the bulbs.
This would work, but
it is not safe or legal to have both headlights powered by one fuse/relay. If one part fails and you are in the DARK.
This is why there are always 2 separate fuses for Left and Right Headlights.
If it works good on one side, I'll buy a second relay kit and have two separated HID systems. I'll cut off the extra connectors on each relay kit.
I had a set of quality 35W HID's from my Volt. I bought just the Hi/Lo H13 bulbs and one relay kit (so far) for not much money. If you have a set of ballasts from another car you could do this.
So, stby, I'll be posting pictures comparing HID to Stock this weekend.