cobrav8 Member 1,969 Member For: 19y 9m 22d Gender: Male Location: New Zealand Posted 05/06/07 07:41 AM Share Posted 05/06/07 07:41 AM (edited) http://www.trademe.co.nz/Trade-Me-Motors/C...n-103189977.htmAnyone used these?Are they too hot for our fittings?Anything else required to use them?Would you use for low/high or just high beams?Also... could you use these in a spot light - replacing the fog light? What part is the spot light lense? Edited 05/06/07 07:45 AM by cobrav8 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
scott52 Member 188 Member For: 22y 21d Gender: Male Location: Perth, W.A. Posted 05/06/07 10:31 AM Share Posted 05/06/07 10:31 AM They don't look like HID lights to me ... they usually have a transformer. They look like normal halogens with blue glass. Is there a website with technical information?Cheers,Scott Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
FastR1Red Member 360 Member For: 19y 8m 13d Gender: Male Location: Mt Waverley Posted 05/06/07 10:42 AM Share Posted 05/06/07 10:42 AM (edited) They're definately NOT HID's. HID's come with an inverter for each light as Scott said plus a wiring harness. The globes are much longer than those pictured, especially if you're got them with both high and low beam. I just bought a set yesterday for the T.sorry forgot to mention, they're cooler than the standard lights plus use less power due to the inverter. (35w each)You can use them in the spotlight but have to order H7 style. The headlights are H4 hi/low. A few run only high in the headlights too but I got the hi/lo.HID's are not yet complied as an after market accessory in Aus, so illegal if you're upgrading a T. They're still waiting for the ASA etc. Edited 05/06/07 11:34 AM by Dagabond Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ZAP No boost, no bottle, just my foot on the throttle! Lifetime Members 7,935 Member For: 20y 11m 1d Gender: Male Location: Sydney Posted 05/06/07 11:58 AM Share Posted 05/06/07 11:58 AM I run HID's and the ones listed are no HID's.You need to run separate power direct from the battery and they have a transformer.They will also cost you over $250 for a conversion kit. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest FatBAt Guests Posted 06/06/07 03:46 AM Share Posted 06/06/07 03:46 AM From what I have read, HID's are just Xenon head lights. Nothing new! High Intensity Discharge through a gas which just happens to be..... you guessed it....Xenon. Xenon in headlights anyway....argon I think in street lights. Anyway here's a site.www.brightheadlights-hid.com/xenon_bulbs.htmCheers Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cobrav8 Member 1,969 Member For: 19y 9m 22d Gender: Male Location: New Zealand Posted 06/06/07 06:59 AM Author Share Posted 06/06/07 06:59 AM I thought the price was too cheap. Damn robbers!For the people who have the real ones - what do you think? How much better is the light? - do you notice a considerable increase in lighting distance, or just brightness? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RUS531 RUS531 Donating Members 410 Member For: 18y 4m 26d Gender: Male Location: Emerald QLD Posted 06/06/07 11:15 AM Share Posted 06/06/07 11:15 AM I think the Xenon ones you are thinking of are normal lamps with a filiment but having xenon gas to give them the white appearence. HID require a ballast (current choke) and there should be a capacitior in the circuit to achieve a voltage spike to ignite the gas between the two elctrodes then after the ignition, electrons can flow very easy between them which why a ballast is needed to limmit the current. with out the ballast there will be pretty much a dead short. The different gas gives the light its colour. Its the same principle with street lamps and other high watt lights you find around like Sodium (yellow/orange) or murcury vapour lights (whitish)Hope this shed some light Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest FatBAt Guests Posted 07/06/07 06:53 AM Share Posted 07/06/07 06:53 AM I think the Xenon ones you are thinking of are normal lamps with a filiment but having xenon gas to give them the white appearence. HID require a ballast (current choke) and there should be a capacitior........................Hope this shed some lightThanks for clearing that upPS.....nice pun at the end Cheers Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RUS531 RUS531 Donating Members 410 Member For: 18y 4m 26d Gender: Male Location: Emerald QLD Posted 07/06/07 07:10 AM Share Posted 07/06/07 07:10 AM ah yes that worked nicely lol I just noticed Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ZAP No boost, no bottle, just my foot on the throttle! Lifetime Members 7,935 Member For: 20y 11m 1d Gender: Male Location: Sydney Posted 07/06/07 10:25 AM Share Posted 07/06/07 10:25 AM The HID conversion makes a HUGE difference to the light output, but the kit is not the best with the Falcon Headlights.I have had to aim my lights down heaps because of the glare from the reflectors being designed for Halogen.I do not get flashed by oncoming traffic, now that I have the lights ajusted, it is still 10x better than stock lights.I got the 4300k temp lights as they are very white and not a ricey blue. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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