maynard83
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Has anyone ever, or has considered, converting the headlights on their deuce to Xenon or LED's?
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Just to let you know (I looked into this THOROUGHLY after driving the Deuce home 18 hours with pathetically dim headlights), the maximum wattage headlights can legally be is 55 watts. Would Johnny Law be able to tell the difference between 55 & 75 watts? I don't know. Personally, I'd rather not take the chance of getting a ticket. The Deuce does sit up awfully high. That's going to make any kind of headlight upgrade much more visible, pun intended.
Also, be aware that xenon headlights & xenon HID headlights are two different animals. HID uses a high voltage inverter to produce an arc making a glowing plasma in the xenon bulb. This is the same principle as the arc from an arc welder ... very bright.
A regular xenon headlight is a marketing tactic used by unscrupulous companies to trick uninformed customers into buying, basically, a regular headlight. It uses an incandescent filament bulb like a regular/halogen headlight. The body of the headlight is filled with xenon & other gasses. These gasses absorb/transmit the light from the incandescent bulb into a more bluish hue, mimicking the color of a true HID xenon system. But this does not add to the brightness of the light. In fact, it makes it dimmer. Gullible teenagers with Japanese Ricer toys buy into the gimmick out of ignorance.
HID off road lights are excellent. Since they only have one wattage, they do not need an actuator like a headlight. That means they do not suffer the vibration problems of a high/low beam HID system. What the actuator does is it relocates the bulb to the focal point of the headlight's mirror. High beam bulb & low beam bulb are separate (although they can be combined into a single "bulb" housing). An electrical actuator such as a worm gear is used to physically reposition the bulb within the headlight housing each time you flip from high to low beam. Hence, susceptibility to vibrations becomes an issue. To get around this, most of the HID conversion lights use fixed halogen for low beam and fixed HID for the high beam. Still, there is a focus problem as both bulbs cannot possibly be at the mirror's focus at the same time. And in a fixed geometry they never will be. Hence optical compromises are made. The result is dispersion of the light that blinds oncoming traffic. Mike's choice of housing is a good choice. At least is shows consideration for the other motorists.
Also be aware that the voltage inverters used in HID systems can take several seconds to warm up. That means your headlights will be really dim for maybe half a minute after you flick them on. It's not a big issue, but you should be aware of it. And be aware there are many Chinese knock-offs whose inverters will go poof within a few months. That's something you don't want happening on the freeway at 2 a.m.
Ideally, if you want super bright both on & off road you are going to spend $$$
LED headlights for on-road
HID auxilliary floodlights off-road
That way you are guaranteed to still be DOT legal & have all the illumination you desire.
Where did you get the Xenon bulbs from?Here's a thread about H4 reflectors with Xenon bulbs....
http://www.steelsoldiers.com/deuce/42950-headlights.html
I used E-Code reflectors with 75w 24v Xenon bulbs, much better visibility and less glare for on-comming traffic.
I'm not shooting the messenger; just want to see for myself. No offense, but there is too much mis-information on the net to accept everything as fact.Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS) No. 108 Section S7.7
Section
Because the "stock" electrical system has been altered (due to the ballasts), ALL aftermarket HID systems are illegal.
Don't shoot the messenger. Go ahead and do it if you like. It doesn't affect me. Just be aware it's illegal.
I'm not shooting the messenger; just want to see for myself. No offense, but there is too much mis-information on the net to accept everything as fact.
It also looks like my deuce is on the edge of maximum headlight height with 1600R20 and no lift.
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