Quote from: R.O.R-2.0 on November 14, 2011, 04:48:31 pmHOLY S#!*! i would hate to have you bright me in oncoming traffic. that IS glorious!!and the way i look at having bright headlights is this: basically, every new car has rudely bright lights anyways, so who really cares if the lights on our old VWs are equally obnoxious?Bingo
HOLY S#!*! i would hate to have you bright me in oncoming traffic. that IS glorious!!and the way i look at having bright headlights is this: basically, every new car has rudely bright lights anyways, so who really cares if the lights on our old VWs are equally obnoxious?
the issue with areos is how they angle the reflector to lens.. adjust it up with a h4 in it.. then put in a hid.. the lights change pattern big time as in one raises up the other lowers its self.. its goofy..
the ones i speak of are hella h4 euro lights, mk1 jetta to be exact.... have owned mine since 94... and have run many different h4 bulbs over the years.. and 2 different sets of HIDs in them too.. me no own any usa crap lights... and mk2 areo hella euro lights have same design flaw of lense to reflector different from side to side.. which changes bulbs location and makes one hid higher, the other lower vs a h4 bulb..
how bout a set of h4 rounds? rounds put out light better then square ever did... just a idea.. finding old westy 200mm set up difficult..
It is also vital to use the stock wiring to trigger relays to power the lights and keep the low beams on all of the time, just adding the high beams to the mix. It is also good to power the relays with big fine stranded wire from the back of the alternator. The alternator terminal has the highest voltage in the entire system. Sometimes 1/2 a volt more.
In a h4 set up, you're recommending running the low beam and the high beam at the same time? I see this greatly reducing bulb life.... I like the tip on where to pick up power for the relay, though.-Todd
...BTW your Bieber avatar is awesome.-Malone