I'm rather passionate about lighting on the front of my car... No offence intended in my replies below:
taza wrote: I hate HID's and/or any kind of white head lights or fog lamps, they just annoy the crap out of me and other drivers.
Those "Cool blue" or "Artic blue" lights are the same plus they're
plain dangerous.
As much as I like a lot of light out the front of my subi HID's are not the way to go and are illegal if you don't have auto adjusting headlights - that rule's out the L series ever having them fitted legally. I'm not sure about auxiliary driving lights though...
tony wrote:pencil beams (or spotlights as they known) are useless for the simple reason that you like them, ie the narrowness of the beam means that they don't light up enough of the road.
Not so. Pencil beams are great for seeing well down the road, sometimes in good conditions and with good light setup 1km can be achieved. Like daylight! Where the spreader is hopeless in seeing distance a pencil beam is used in combination like what Dane has in his pic below - one spotter (driver's side so you're as close to directly above the beam as possible) and one spreader. Great combination.
Some lights are a built in combination like my Hella 100's on the front of Ruby Scoo.
tony wrote:it is also illegal and bloody dangerous to drive with driving lights or spotlights on in built up areas or in the face of traffic.
In oncoming traffic yes. Built up areas no - it is perfectly legal (at least in victoria) to use all your high beam lights in built up areas - towns, suburbs, city - so long as there's no on coming traffic. Reason being that more light you can use the better it is for the driver to identify moving hazards ahead (such as dark dressed drunks between overhead street lights). In the 'burbs and the city it is not often that you can use your driving lights or high beams for that matter simply due to the oncoming traffic.
Pet hate are those on the freeways that drive with their high beams on regardless of oncoming traffic.
tony wrote:if you do fit better ones to the car headlights make sure you run heavier wiring and run thrrough a relay to protect your wiring harness and light switch.had burnt out dipswitches, been there done that!
^
The only way to do it!
GOD wrote:
Step 2 is upgrade headlight globes to better quality, higher output ones. This is beneficial wherever you drive.
So long as your low beams remain 55W for oncoming traffic. Often people upgrade both light wattages only to blind those oncoming due to the higher low beam output. The AU series 1 falcons were notorious for blinding oncoming traffic with their low beams!
GOD wrote:Never point anything more than your low beams at another vehicle, regardless of the lens type.
I've never had problems with theft or vandalism of lights, but there aren't many of those sort of miscreants where i live.
Agreed! And agreed. But if you're worried about having your light stolen you can buy locking nuts to help avoid theft of the lights.
If I were to upgrade my lights up front I'd probably look at a set of Light Force lights, something like
these. But expect to pay a coulpe of hundred plus another!
Cheers
Bennie