New HIDs! finally!
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From: Daytona Beach/Melbourne, Florida
New HIDs! finally!
FInally got some HIDs for my car! These are the DDM Tuning 10k, 35W slim ballast set. Enjoy!
Here you can see where I put the ballast, and my custom dual relay HID harness setup. Its a dual setup because the signal wire is hooked up to the parking light, but the first relay is triggered by ignition power, which then triggers the main relay, so when my car is off and I activate/deactivate my alarm, the HIDs wont flash with the parking lights!

Passenger side ballast

HIDs on the wall

HIDs on the car
Here you can see where I put the ballast, and my custom dual relay HID harness setup. Its a dual setup because the signal wire is hooked up to the parking light, but the first relay is triggered by ignition power, which then triggers the main relay, so when my car is off and I activate/deactivate my alarm, the HIDs wont flash with the parking lights!

Passenger side ballast

HIDs on the wall

HIDs on the car
Last edited by yitzac1990; Mar 4, 2010 at 04:14 PM.
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i got the exact same one. but i ran into this problem which is kind of hard to explain but ima try.
so the HIDs turn on perfectly but only when i turn them on when i initally start the car. if i put the ebrake down first and try to turn them on they wont turn on. So when im driving and the sun is still out and still driving as the sun goes down i would have to pull over turn off my car and turn it on again just to turn on the lights.....
so the HIDs turn on perfectly but only when i turn them on when i initally start the car. if i put the ebrake down first and try to turn them on they wont turn on. So when im driving and the sun is still out and still driving as the sun goes down i would have to pull over turn off my car and turn it on again just to turn on the lights.....
10 000K? don't ever go more than 6000K . Blue colour produces less light and a lot more glare.
If projectors were cheaper for our car, I would buy them.
http://intellexual.net/hid.html
If projectors were cheaper for our car, I would buy them.
http://intellexual.net/hid.html
There are many companies and private merchants out there that will advertise 7000K, 8000K, and even 12000K HID kits. Most of these vendors lurk around on ebay, online car forums, websites, and ricer accessory shops. 100% of the people that buy these kits do so because they are uninformed, uneducated, or misguided in the field of lighting, and will buy these junk kits thinking three things: that these bulbs are brighter, that these bulbs should cost more money, and/or that they will perform better. All three statements are completely false. Perhaps this misconception and frenzy for purple lights originates from BMW and Audi's infamous Hella projector HIDs.
So allow me to explain the real truth of the matter... Philips is the number one manufacturer of HID bulbs. The Philips OEM D2S bulb is rated at 4100K at 12.8 volts and produces 3200 lumens of light. The Philips Ultinon D2S is 5800K at 12.8 volts and produces 2400 lumens of light. As you can see, with all other factors remaining constant, the brightness of an HID bulb declines the higher up the color index you go. Vision, a Korean bulb manufacturer, makes an 8000K bulb, which they used to advertise on Acura-Forums as 2000 lumens bright. This is barely a marked improvement over halogens, and will produce more glare and eye fatigue than it is beneficial. 4100K has been proven through tireless independent research by the Germans, Japanese, and Americans to be the most functional, truest white and thus the brightest possible color temperature (ceteris paribus).
Every car manufacturer in the world (including BMW and Audi) uses none other than a standard 4100K gas-discharge bulb. No exceptions. The reason being is that 4100K is daylight white in color and produces the same color visible light as direct sunlight. This is least fatiguing functional color on the eyes and produces the most comfortable contrast on the road.
So allow me to explain the real truth of the matter... Philips is the number one manufacturer of HID bulbs. The Philips OEM D2S bulb is rated at 4100K at 12.8 volts and produces 3200 lumens of light. The Philips Ultinon D2S is 5800K at 12.8 volts and produces 2400 lumens of light. As you can see, with all other factors remaining constant, the brightness of an HID bulb declines the higher up the color index you go. Vision, a Korean bulb manufacturer, makes an 8000K bulb, which they used to advertise on Acura-Forums as 2000 lumens bright. This is barely a marked improvement over halogens, and will produce more glare and eye fatigue than it is beneficial. 4100K has been proven through tireless independent research by the Germans, Japanese, and Americans to be the most functional, truest white and thus the brightest possible color temperature (ceteris paribus).
Every car manufacturer in the world (including BMW and Audi) uses none other than a standard 4100K gas-discharge bulb. No exceptions. The reason being is that 4100K is daylight white in color and produces the same color visible light as direct sunlight. This is least fatiguing functional color on the eyes and produces the most comfortable contrast on the road.
Trying to emulate this color-flickering effect with a solid-state blue or purple bulb is only detrimental to lighting performance, it doesn't fool anyone, but most importantly it endangers other motorists around you. Blue light has what we call a very high diffuse density, which causes it to radiate outwards as opposed to forwards. What results is a wide glow of light outside the beam pattern that is blinding to motorists you share the road with. A blue HID bulb will produce color bleed around the headlight, around the objects it lights up, outside of the beam pattern, and around the cut off line. This is effect is known as "glare", and these illegal and improperly installed HID kits are the reason why HIDs get a bad wrap. As common evidence of glare, observe a traffic light at night in a dimly lit area. There is red light and green light. Red is opposite blue and green is next to blue, thus we can substitute green for blue. If you observe the aura, or glow, of light around a red light and compare it to that of a green light, you'll notice that the green light produces much more glare than red. Blue is even worse. Purple, the worst.
Last edited by mrblob20; Feb 6, 2011 at 04:25 AM.



