Tahoe/Yukon Headlight Information Thread

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93blkongreenpro

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What's the difference between the 4.0 and 3.0?
The better hi beam solenoid, the solenoid plug is in the rear, instead of the front, better high beam, better low beam Hotspot, and longer threaded shaft. Thats all i can think of atm.

I have my 3.0's for sale. I never used them as I held off on finishing the install until the 4.0's came out.

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Meccanoble

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There is a lot of info in thsi thread and a lot of reasons to not change your setup unless you going with a retrofit which is the most costly. For those that cant afford the most custom setup, what is a good reliable setup for headlights and fogs?

I''ve seen some HID setups with plug and play kits and though they shine everywhere and blind oncoming traffic, they look good from a non functionality stand point and still find it hard to believe they wont perform regular halogen bulbs especially if you go with a 6000k setup that maintains some white light. Similar to how we have a suspension setup that is not the most expensive but good enough to recommend, what setup can we make from lighting?
 

05Single

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Need to update first original posts. Pics missing
 

Vanquish Auto

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How can we add to this great write up? We are putting together a solid review between hid-led-AllInOne led-halogen

We have a certified lumen meter and currently finished testing beam patterns and lumens will be ready soon.

We could use the 07 headlight for a full review if a lot of you ask!

I did a quick test of projector vs reflector and it was a mean beat down for the reflector housing putting down only 47 lumens from a 65 ft distance ( 13 year old hids 8k yes they are still going strong )

The projector headlights on the same distance were putting a good 220 lumens with fresh about 9 months 55w 5k on factory projectors which are kind of crappy. Haven't been able to bring out the big guns for testing.

pic of the 1000 lumen led backup actually measuring 1051

https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B4e6yuhd0dXjVmFDaGtfNV90dnc
 

Vanquish Auto

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there isn't a setup that is inexpensive and recommended, because it cannot be done. Live with stock, build some retrofits, buy someone's used retrofits, or buy brand new retrofit. Nothing else is worth it on the NNBS platform

I would recommend our 11G led kit for the headlights. I could not have said the same thing about led kits just a few weeks ago. It would be great if some of you could give it a try. I would even give a good discount!

on cutof line/ beam pattern is already a winner by far, lumen tests will be up soon and a full review comparing this led kit vs "all in one led kit" vs hid vs halogen will be ready by monday and it will be posted on a separate thread.


https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B4e6yuhd0dXjOU9VdTBreWw0NnM
 

Vanquish Auto

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A couple of last points regarding HID lighting and retrofits:

1. Although no OEM ballast manufacturer makes ballasts for on road use greater than 35W, 50/55W aftermarket ballasts are widely available. First of all you must keep in mind the wattage specs on the ballast aren't precise. OEM ballasts always run a few watts short of their spec, aftermarket ballasts much more so. Aftermarket ballasts are plagued by the same quality control issues as aftermarket bulbs, so again you run a higher chance of failure or worse. 50/55W aftermarket ballasts will run A LOT hotter and can produce the exact same issue as having quads if combined with the wrong projector. Very few aftermarket projectors can handle that much wattage, in fact TRS will not sell you their MH1s with anything above a 35W ballast. Even some OEM projectors cannot handle 50W, especially if one uses non OEM bulbs, and their bowls will flake away.

2. Color temperature/Kelvin are highly subjective. OEM bulb manufacturers have established baselines from which they extrapolate color. OEM specs have historically been pegged at 4300K which look white when looking at the projector but has a slight warm tint on the road. Again, much research had gone into establishing that that color is the most effective for night sight, tires the eyes the least, and puts out the most lumens. Philips started manufacturing Ultinon bulbs a few years ago which are much bluer and they were highly controversial. They were accepted by some car manufacturers whilst acknowledging that lumens were lost. Most recently Osram came out with their CBI line of bulbs (Cool blue Intense) which after about 20hrs use settle at around 5000K. They are the first HID bulb that I know of to manage this kelvin rating whilst retaining 4300K oem lumen output … in fact some say that they surpass all OEM bulbs but for the other recently released Osram bulbs called SVS. The SVS and CBI have the highest lumen output at 4300K and 5000K respectively, they also cost about $180 a set.

When you see pictures of color charts when people are trying to sell you aftermarket bulbs, believe those representations at your peril. There is no worldwide standard for what K is what color, they just wing it. In any case the higher you go past 4300/5000K you start losing more lumens exponentially, and run a higher risk of getting ticketed ... past 8000K you're just basically a High Intensity Douche. :)

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ETA:

Member arpz on hidp posted these comparo pics, and I thought they portrayed pretty well the loss of lumens as one goes up in Kelvin temp on their HIDs.

These low beams shots are on a set of very good projectors (RX-350), with Morimoto (slightly above average Chinese bulbs) D2S bulbs, the first pic is 5000K the second is 4300K. Both pics are on iphone auto settings.

View attachment 137696

View attachment 137697

It gets progressively worse the higher temp one goes, and also once you start dropping below 4000K. The only bulbs that are an exception to this are the Osram CBI bulbs that are the first built not to lose any lumens at 5000K.

Anyway, I know that some people think they get more light with a bluer light but it's simply not the case, not in proper OEM projectors and much less in PnP kits.

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There's never been an automotive OEM bulb manufactured to handle 50/55W. If you run OEM bulbs at that wattage it will significantly shorten their lifespan and they will run hotter, thus affecting surrounding components. Also, if you run any 35W bulb at higher wattage it will lower the K temperature rating. Not sure what the formula is of W to K but it I note it for the record.

There is one bulb that was originally manufactured to run at 50W. it is a non-automotive HID bulb called the DL-50 which came in a couple of variations including the infamous 'fatboy'. These have to be notched to work in tat D2S socket. They will only work right if run at 50W. The only way to get a real 50W output out of a ballast is to take an OEM ballast like AL-Bosch, and have it custom boosted, heatsinked, and potted to run at 50W. I've had this done in the past, and you're talking about $600 just for 2 bulbs and 2 ballasts. The output is insane, but you can get about 80% of that output by using Morimoto 5Five (50W) ballasts, and either SVS or CBI bulbs … but few projectors can take that amount of heat, so you might want to check if anyone has tried it on the projector you're looking at.

3. Custom modifications to shields, shield spacing, lens spacing, foreground limiters, are some of the customizations a lot of folks like to have done to achieve different color bands at the cutoff and other objectives. I know basically nothing about this stuff, so you can find out more on HIDP or by talking to a retrofitter.


LED lighting

There's no LED bulb on the market today that is a straight replacement for a headlight halogen bulb. LEDs generate a massive amount of heat, and the heatsink required to replicate halogen output in an LED bulb would be massive … certainly too big to be a straight swap for a halogen bulb. I'm sure this will happen at some point, but the tech is not there yet. And should it get there, the optics of the LED bulb, for the same reasons as an HID bulb, will fail to be compatible with halogen reflectors.

There are new LED projector modules on the market, including the brand new Hella Bi-Led module. They cost $700 a module. For $1400 you will get the same lumen output as a halogen bulb but with a pure white light.

There are other reputable manufacturers like JW Speaker who make stand alone headlamps and fog lamps in standardized sizes as direct housing replacements. Again very expensive, but very cool if you want full LED street legal lighting on your Harley or CJ7.

You an use a PnP 5202 bulb for your fogs if you want a whiter light. That light will only be for decorative purposes as the LEDs won't put out enough lumens to be functional … but then again, neither are our halogen fog bulbs.

For most other smaller bulb applications like DRL/TS/Park/Brakes PnP LED are often a cheap and effective alternative to customize one's truck.



That's pretty much all I know about HID and lighting in general. Undoubtably I am mistaken/misinformed on some elements but I'm somewhat confident I have a general grasp on the topic. The 'I run this and that' with no issue arguments will likely come back, all I''l say to that point is that technology is a matter of science and probability. The science is sound, and running inferior components increases possibility of failure and damage … it does not mean that every component fails.

I hope this info is useful to a soul or two.

I'm tired ...


Best led projectors are $300 the set right now but it's not there yet. HID retrofits are still #1. check this out

Here is a comparison of the bixenon hid projectors vs the new iLED bi-led projectors that are twice more expensive.

We really had our hopes up about the new LED projectors, who doesn't like the idea of not having to deal with bulbs and ballasts and color mismatch of most hids? The new led projectors are much more lighter and very well built. The fan can be quite a little noisier compared to our 11G LED Headlight conversion Kit but that didn't set us back and we were eager to test them. Knowing how well the Bi-xenon projectors work we had to just turn them on and test them against the wall of the next building about 30 plus yards around noon with the sun out, we know it's good when you can see the cutoff on the wall. Sadly the led projectors didn't do this so we had to take it to the dark room to se what was wrong with the output.

Here is a side by side comparison

Bixenon HID Projectors on the left vs the Bi-LED Projectors on the right.
Screen Shot 2017-07-16 at 2.32.01 AM.png
 

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