Here , swinging from the top on my L322 bull bar.
Gary
found it, 208mm diameter x 150mm deep. Thanks![]()
Here , swinging from the top on my L322 bull bar.
Gary
I've had all sorts of lights but I still go back to the Rallye 4000 lights with a decent HID kit.
I had bought a few cheap chinese HID kits but recently learnt how much better the quality kits are.
The light colour is personal preferance. Only 4 weeks ago, I drove from Darwin to Bathurst, dropped into Sydney and then back to Darwin in 6 days. Then 2 weeks ago, I drove from Darwin to Perth, out to Karlgarin and back to Darwin in 10 days. I did Bathurst to Darwin in 43 hours and then return in 44.5hrs (It would have been 42.5hrs but the steaks are too good to pass at Pine Creek). I drove through 2 nights on the way to Perth and 1 night on the way back. I didn't suffer any eye strain that a few talk about with the whiter light.
I don't think you can get a better reflector than a glass reflector made by Hella but I'm currently researching projectors. I don't know much about them yet but there is a fair bit of discussion about them on this forum: HiDplanet : The Official Automotive Lighting Forum. I don't know of any forums discussing how good halogen lights are.
Happy Days
Thanks for that dads still a big fan of his 4000 Hellas he has had many sets over the years and i guess still loves them!! I actually have had a HID 100w highbeam kit in my prado 150 a year ago and really like the HID light i had 4300k colour and found it to be my favourite!
I have Hella Rallye 4000s with a HID conversion fitted to my 87 Rangie. I don't think they are anywhere near as good as my Fyrlyts, either the standard ones or the Nemesis.
No idea. I fitted them years ago. They still work, I just prefer the light output of the Fyrlyts.
Coop,
in the colour spectrum HID and LED lights tend to be missing the reds and yellows, leaving light which tends towards blue.
The human eye needs reds / yellows to work properly. The pupil won't close properly if those colours are missing. So the LED / HID looks very bright, but only because it is glary. The lack of red / yellow also causes colour rendering issues for humans, so it can be hard to distinguish (for example) a grey kangaroo on a grey road.
Halogen lights are actually the closest light source to natural sunlight when it comes to the colour spectrum.
Or so I am told.
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