- Feb 19, 2003
- 5,101
- 0
- 71
Hey guys. Just wanted to collect some input regarding Xenon headlights. Are they really safer or let you drive faster at night? I think they look friggin awesome! 
If you like $120 headlight bulbs, plus the often-faulty ballast...sure, they're okay.
And if you're talking aftermarket...well, I hate you. So tired of thinking a cop is behind me...oh wait, that's just some guy's flickering blue headlights.
You're looking for projector housing + halogens.
If you like $120 headlight bulbs, plus the often-faulty ballast...sure, they're okay.
And if you're talking aftermarket...well, I hate you. So tired of thinking a cop is behind me...oh wait, that's just some guy's flickering blue headlights.
You're looking for projector housing + halogens.
Hey man I'm not talking about swapping HID lights into a halogen housing. I just wanted general opinions of halogen vs xenon lighting.
Sorry, I just kind of assumed you were talking aftermarket. While there are good kits out there, there's just a ton of trash, and that's what I always see.
Zivic - the factory lights I've worked with never flickered unless the ballast was bad. Though in many cases I can't say whether those I see on the road are factory or aftermarket in some cases.
But I definitely have seen flickering aftermarkets (e.g. I don't think 90's Civics had an HID option), which, again, I assume is because of cheap, unstable ballast unit.
I still prefer projector housings and regular old H4 or similar halogen bulbs. I'm not a big fan of the bluish-tinged light (the REALLY blue lights are just bad), and halogen projectors still give the nice cut-off. The light is more focused and does not light up the whole area as well, though; many HID's do offer better low-beams (some others notsomuch).
I'm not a fan of the motorized single-bulb setups, though (low/high is same bulb). My highs will eat that shit for lunch. Perhaps someone else with a recent-ish Mazda will confirm that I'm not nuts...my 3's highbeams on a winding back road are like freaking daylight. I think it's just a second H4 bulb with a crazy-broad reflector (and the lows stay on).
I guess the point is- it's all in the design. There are good halogens and bad halogens; good HID's and bad HID's. If you're looking for a new car, it's a good time of year to be able to do nighttime test-drives (most dealer sales departments are open until 8 or 9 around here).
I somewhat disagree with your ranking. HID in Halogen projector works out pretty well. HID in halogen reflectors, not so much. There's a clear distinction between the two.