Keith Tanner wrote:
fidelity101 wrote:
and to Keith's point of color temperature - that is a fact. HIDs work better than LEDs because of their color temperature and your perception of that color. It basically spikes each of the RGB values soo high through the roof that each color that makes up the entire beam is with such intensity that your brain thinks it must be white. With LEDs you have a much colder color temperature which is to your brain makes it appear brighter - it just plays with your sensation/perception.
for example, if you put a 5000 lumen halogen lamp next to a 5000 lumen LED lamp they both are equal in light output but your brain will think that the LED is actually brighter.
Given those two 5000 lumen lamps, do you actually see better with the LED or the HID? Does that perception of brighter light with the LED mean you can see more, or is it a wash?
The usual comment I get from the LEDs in my Miata (7" round GE Nighthawks) is "they're not as bright as I expected, but I can see everything". The big Hellas on the tow rig get "good lord". And I like the sharp European style cutoff, I run European lights in a lot of my cars for that purpose.
HID may percieve better just because the color temperature is so extreme but I think after a certain value your brain kind of washes it out any more intensity of that color doesn't matter because the braind essentially doesn't processes it above those values.
The Euro lights run VOL while we run VOR pattern (or I've mixed them up again) basically it describes the sharpness and rise of the angle of cut off line. If you want to go full stupid... find yourself a euro spec LH lamp for RH traffic and make the other handed lamp opposite traffic so you have both of the cut off lines that are higher. However you will find that people will flash their brights at you for oncomming traffic. The cut off line is there to prevent this but if you mix up your LH traffic and right hand traffic you get max lumen output essentially.
illegal but you will have supreme visibility.
rslifkin wrote:
Color rendering index matters too when it comes to those dark, rainy nights. Halogens do very well in this respect. LEDs can vary quite a bit and HIDs are almost always worse than halogen. Low CRI leads to things being closer to monochrome (like what happens with old sodium vapor street / parking lot lights). Higher CRI shows colors better, which makes it easier to see the brown deer standing next to the darker brown tree, especially when there's not a massive amount of light available.
I had this issue in my mazda 6 I retrofitted the headlamp with 1000lumen bi function LED units from the new lexus RX and the glare from the wet road was awful, I kept my fogs halogen for that reason because they really helped. For OEMs they hate doing this (except for FCA for some reason, IE Jeep cherokee) where they 4 different light colors on the front of the vehicle. DRL is lED, LB/HB is HID and fog is halogen... the color harmony is bad and a lot of customer complain about it. some of that is budget and styling though.
curtis73 wrote:
Driven5 wrote:
Aparently IIHS has just started evaluating headlight effectiveness this past year.
This. The testing and regulation regarding headlights hasn't been updated in forever, and prior to the mid 80s, most vehicles used some combination of the same four bulbs; small round quads, large round doubles, and the same two possibilities in square.
Now that headlights are so widely variable, the testing requirements haven't kept up with the changes.
correct, but they have followed in Europe and China and Japan and basically everywhere but here....
:(
ADB systems are driving with your high beams on at all times, as cars approach the sensors send signals to the lamp ecu and dims/turns off the appropriate LED that puts that position of light down the road. This is SLOWLY being introduced, don't expect it to be legal until 2021 or 2022 model year cars though if were lucky - you know how fast government moves...
Duke wrote:
SyntheticBlinkerFluid wrote:
I don't know, Dodge could put Subaru to shame with their everything they've made in the last 20 years
I actually like Mopars, but I have never driven a modern one that didn't make me feel like Mr. Magoo. The only exception is our '12 T&C, which has the HID projectors. They're good, but frankly, no better than the ones in our '04 TSX, despite 8 more years of available development time.
a projector from 04 or 08 or hell even 94 is roughly the same concept, you just change the lens shape for styling purposes but there are a few variants but the optical concept is generally the same:
LanEvo wrote:
The last two new cars I bought were a 2003 Lancer Evo VIII and a 2010 BMW 335xi. Both Came with HID lights from the factory that were pretty impressive. The Evo VIII had razor-sharp cutoff and no hot spots. Perfect. The BMW (believe it or not) isn't as good.
I kind of thought all new cars would have HID lights by now.
HIDs are being phased out because they are too costly and draw too much energy, we need to save those amps for your 15 way power seat! the ballast is expensive and LED technology has come down in cost and is being used in higher volumes so for better packaging space/thermal concerns for the same cost or cheaper that uses less power is reduced c02 and improve MPGs, its win win win.
car39 wrote:
My wife's Volvo C30 came with the optional "turning" headlights, the lights physically move with the steering wheel. Very nice setup, much better than my S60.
these are the bee's knees.. of the old day. Now we can perform that same function with no moving parts, just turning on LEDs that aim at different reflectors.
snailmont5oh wrote:
I sometimes wonder what the fascination is with such a sharp cutoff. I would rather see (on low beam) some very bright and useful light low, with tons of side spill, with a dimmer area somewhat above where the "cutoff" is. Enough light to see a little bit of stuff, but still manageable for oncoming traffic. People think that oncoming traffic should have "no glare", but c'mon, glare is a part of life, and a little won't kill you.
But then, I also use oncoming vehicles' lights to make sure that there's nothing between us.
The sharp cut off line is AMAZING for the snow storms. A night and day different to say the least.
java230 wrote:
Projector in a halogen bowl.
projectors can be halogen or led or HID, its just the optical concept of accumulating light from the light source and sending it through a condensing lens which is what you see from the outside.
If you guys want to make our own budget lightbar go to the junkyard, smash some headlamps and buy the projectors on the cheap. disassemble them, remove the shutter or mirror that makes the cut off line now you have 360* of light through that lens, it will scatter light everywhere and cause glare but if you're offroad racing it won't matter, MAS LIGHT PORFAVOR! Then just mount them to a square tube and call it good.