HID headlight upgrade
#21
Currently a Corvette Owner!
I paid a total of $175 including S&H and tax. I had a discount code and they were on sale last year. Plus, I really like the way the halogen set-up is (headlights out-board, turn signals in-board) more than the HID set-up, which is reversed.
#22
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#25
Currently a Corvette Owner!
#26
Cobra Member
A lot of people have put 35w HID's into the raxiom headlights without issue.
It's a true projector, and will give you much better focused light compared to an HID in a halogen housing, and will also not blind everyone else on the road.
It's a true projector, and will give you much better focused light compared to an HID in a halogen housing, and will also not blind everyone else on the road.
#28
Cobra Member
Originally Posted by PJRManagement
Mine do not blind oncoming drivers. Get a high-quality kit, get 4300K, and the light is no brighter than any stock HID install.
Just because the color temp is the same does not mean it is "just as good" as factory HID. HID bulbs require a specially designed reflector housing, or much more commonly a projector with a built in cutoff.
Put your car side by side next to a factory HID equipped car and you will see just how much light you are throwing all over the road, based on your putting the wrong type of bulb in the stock housing.
It's simple light physics, that you change the center point of light in a mirror, you change the entire characteristics of light scatter. You can't argue that with "quality of kit" and color temp. It's about bulb style and light center.
#29
Currently a Corvette Owner!
My goodness, you have your panties in a twist over this one, don't you? I guess I would be upset also if I spent $900 on an HID upgrade option only to find out that aftermarket costs less than $200. Oh well.
#30
Cobra Member
Originally Posted by PJRManagement
My goodness, you have your panties in a twist over this one, don't you? I guess I would be upset also if I spent $900 on an HID upgrade option only to find out that aftermarket costs less than $200. Oh well.
What you do in your spare time is your business, but I personally don't wear panties. To each their own though if that's what you like.
I do things right, or not at all. You don't live by that philosophy, so agree to disagree.
I love my stock, brighter, more focused, and safer HID's and they were worth much more than 900.
Last edited by LEwis26; 2/29/12 at 09:07 PM.
#32
Bullitt Member
Thread Starter
Originally Posted by stang8psi
OP that cruizin concepts link you posted with those HID's are being sold all over ebay for under $100. Don't buy that cheap *** junk,
#34
I have a slightly different question. I am trying to have factory HID's installed in my 2012 Roush (my selling dealer is doing the work), and right now they are stumped. If I understand the situation, since the car wasn't built with this option, the smart junction box isn't properly 'dealing with' the HID's. The evidence is that they cannot get the high beams to work. The smart junction box is getting the signal from the high beam switch, but is not sending the signal to the lights themselves. Anyone have any thoughts or advice?
[I think there has to be a solution, because other cars exist with my desired combination of electronics (HID's, Nav system, no backup camera, no heated seats, etc.)]. ??
[I think there has to be a solution, because other cars exist with my desired combination of electronics (HID's, Nav system, no backup camera, no heated seats, etc.)]. ??
#36
Currently a Corvette Owner!
See if this has the correct info for you...
http://www.xenonsupply.com/media/sto...y%20Manual.pdf
Pages 5-8 are the different wiring diagrams - depending upon hi/lo confirguration. Hope this helps.
http://www.xenonsupply.com/media/sto...y%20Manual.pdf
Pages 5-8 are the different wiring diagrams - depending upon hi/lo confirguration. Hope this helps.
#37
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Agreed. HIDs may seem like an expensive upgrade during the purchase of the car - but NOTHING beats OEM. Laughable to think an aftermarket kit would ever approach the light spread of an OEM system.
#38
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Yeah, expensive enough to make my cheap *** say, "ehhhhh you don't need em, stop being greedy". Now I'm kicking myself realizing how much of a great deal it was.
#39
Currently a Corvette Owner!
Wow, you guys are so smart, you must be absolutely right. The $900 factory option must be better than my $175 aftermarket. Better by at least $725, I'm sure. 'Laughable', actually (JP). I'll do a side-by-side any time, day or night, and all you really smart guys should be able to tell the difference, right? Oh, wait, I've done that many times at car shows, both day and night, oh, and yeah, they're just as good. But I'm not as smart as you guys, and I 'don't do things right' (Lewis). That must be why my car is ogled over at every show I go to.
#40
Cobra Member
Side by side of a stang with proper projector base HIDs next to a stang whose owner decided to go the cheap route and put HID's in the halogen reflectors.
Pretty easy to see the glare from the halogen vs the sharp no glare cutoff from the projectors.
Installing HID lights, an arc style bulb, into a halogen, an filament style bulb, housing is doing it the incorrect way. There's no argument against that. If you want to do that, go for it, but I do things right or not at all. Just a personal philosophy that you choose not to live by. It's your vehicle, with which you can do as you please, but I am just educating others who come Into this thread about the physics behind the different bulb and housings types, and why every manufacturer either uses a projector, or a specially designed reflector when using HIDs.
If it were as simple as just switching out the bulbs and getting the same performance(which it's not), why would manufacturers be using projectors? There's a engineering reason behind it, based completely on the physics of the light beam and the light source type( arc vs filament).
Pretty easy to see the glare from the halogen vs the sharp no glare cutoff from the projectors.
Installing HID lights, an arc style bulb, into a halogen, an filament style bulb, housing is doing it the incorrect way. There's no argument against that. If you want to do that, go for it, but I do things right or not at all. Just a personal philosophy that you choose not to live by. It's your vehicle, with which you can do as you please, but I am just educating others who come Into this thread about the physics behind the different bulb and housings types, and why every manufacturer either uses a projector, or a specially designed reflector when using HIDs.
If it were as simple as just switching out the bulbs and getting the same performance(which it's not), why would manufacturers be using projectors? There's a engineering reason behind it, based completely on the physics of the light beam and the light source type( arc vs filament).