Why not to buy an hid kit/ general hid discussion

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 11-05-2006, 01:18 PM
  #1  
Contributing Member
Thread Starter
iTrader: (1)
 
silviaks2nr's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: NC
Posts: 3,273
Why not to buy an hid kit/ general hid discussion

To anyone that is interested in upgrading to hid optics, please read this info by Daniel Stern, It is very wordy so don't hesitate to ask if something needs my explanation. However, It is very much worth the read. It is very important to understand that what i have reffered to as "retrofitting" is totally different from what Stern refers to "retroftting". Stern uses "retrofitting" to describe re-basing an hid capsule to fit/line up in a halogen housing... whether it be reflective halogen or projective halogen. (he concludes that neither are good choices) When I, and most of the hid community, refer to "retrofitting" I am refering to taking the "guts" out of oem hid headlamps and mounting them in halogen housings.

Originally posted by Daniel Stern
So you've read about HID headlamps and have it in mind to convert your car. A few mouse clicks on the web, and you've found a couple of outfits offering to sell you a "conversion" that will fit any car with a given type of halogen bulb. STOP! Put away that credit card.

An HID kit consists of HID ballasts and bulbs for "retrofitting" into a halogen headlamp. Often, these products are advertised using the name of a reputable lighting company ("Real Philips kit! Real Osram kit! Real Hella kit!") to try to give the potential buyer the illusion of legitimacy. Fact: While some of the components in these kits are sometimes manufactured by the companies mentioned, the components aren't being put to their designed or intended use. Reputable companies like Philips, Osram, Hella, etc. NEVER endorse this kind of "retrofit" usage of their products.

Halogen headlamps and HID headlamps require very different optics to produce a safe and effective—not to mention legal—beam pattern. How come? Because of the very different characteristics of the two kinds of light source.

A halogen bulb has a cylindrical light source: the glowing filament. The space immediately surrounding the cylinder of light is completely dark, and so the sharpest contrast between bright and dark is along the edges of the cylinder of light. The ends of the filament cylinder fade from bright to dark. An HID bulb, on the other hand, has a crescent-shaped light source -- the arc. It's crescent-shaped because as it passes through the space between the two electrodes, its heat causes it to try to rise. The space immediately surrounding the crescent of light glows in layers...the closer to the crescent of light, the brighter the glow. The ends of the arc crescent are the brightest points, and immediately beyond these points is completely dark, so the sharpest contrast between bright and dark is at the ends of the crescent of light.

When designing the optics (lens and/or reflector) for a lamp, the characteristics of the light source are *the* driving factor around which everything else must be engineered. If you go and change the light source, you've done the equivalent of putting on somebody else's eyeglasses: You can probably make them fit on your face OK, but you won't see properly.

Now, what about those "retrofit" jobs in which the beam cutoff still appears sharp? Don't be fooled; it's an error to judge a beam pattern solely by its cutoff. In many lamps, especially the projector types, the cutoff will remain the same regardless of what light source is behind it. Halogen bulb, HID capsule, cigarette lighter, firefly, hold it up to the sun—whatever. That's because of the way a projector lamp works. The cutoff is simply the projected image of a piece of metal running side-to-side behind the lens. Where the optics come in is in distributing the light under the cutoff. And, as with all other automotive lamps (and, in fact, all optical instruments), the optics are calculated based not just on where the light source is within the lamp (focal length) but also the specific photometric characteristics of the light source...which parts of it are brighter, which parts of it are darker, where the boundaries of the light source are, whether the boundaries are sharp or fuzzy, the shape of the light source, and so forth.

As if the optical mismatch weren't reason enough to drop the idea of "retrofitting" an HID bulb where a halogen one belongs—and it is reason enough!—there are even more reasons why not to do it. Here are some of them:

The only available arc capsules have a longitudinal arc (arc path runs front to back) on the axis of the bulb, but many popular halogen headlamp bulbs, such as 9004, 9007, H3 and H12, use a filament that is transverse (side-to-side) and/or offset (not on the axis of the bulb) central axis of the headlamp reflector). In this case, it is impossible even to roughly approximate the position and orientation of the filament with a "retrofit" HID capsule. Just because your headlamp might use an axial-filament bulb, though, doesn't mean you've jumped the hurdles—the laws of optical physics don't bend even for the cleverest marketing department, nor for the catchiest HID "retrofit" kit box.

The latest gimmick is HID arc capsules set in an electromagnetic base so that they shift up and down or back and forth. These are being marketed as "dual beam" kits that claim to address the loss of high beam with fixed-base "retrofits" in place of dual-filament halogen bulbs. (A cheaper variant of this is one that uses a fixed HID bulb with a halogen bulb strapped or glued to the side of it...yikes!) What you wind up with is two poorly-formed beams, at best. The reason the original equipment market has not adopted the movable-capsule designs they've been playing with since the mid 1990s is because it is impossible to control the arc position accurately so it winds up in the same position each and every time.

In the original-equipment field, there are single-capsule dual-beam systems appearing ("BiXenon", etc.), but these all rely on a movable optical shield, or movable reflector—the arc capsule stays in one place. The Original Equipment engineers have a great deal of money and resources at their disposal, and if a movable capsule were a practical way to do the job, they'd do it. The "retrofit" kits certainly don't address this problem anywhere near satisfaction. And even if they did, remember: Whether a fixed or moving-capsule "retrofit" is contemplated, solving the arc-position problem and calling it good is like going to a hospital with two broken ribs, a sprained ankle and a crushed toe and having the nurse say "Well, you're free to go home now, we've put your ankle in a sling!" Focal length (arc/filament positioning) is only just ONE issue out of several.

The most dangerous part of the attempt to "retrofit" Xenon headlamps is that sometimes you get a deceptive and illusory "improvement" in the performance of the headlamp. The performance of the headlamp is perceived to be "better" because of the much higher level of foreground lighting (on the road immediately in front of the car). However, the beam patterns produced by this kind of "conversion" virtually always give less distance light, and often an alarming lack of light where there's meant to be a relative maximum in light intensity. The result is the illusion that you can see better than you actually can, and that's not safe.

It's tricky to judge headlamp beam performance without a lot of knowledge, a lot of training and a lot of special equipment, because subjective perceptions are very misleading. Having a lot of strong light in the foreground, that is on the road close to the car and out to the sides, is very comforting and reliably produces a strong impression of "good headlights". The problem is that not only is foreground lighting of decidedly secondary importance when travelling much above 30 mph, but having a very strong pool of light close to the car causes your pupils to close down, worsening your distance vision...all the while giving you this false sense of security. This is to say nothing of the massive amounts of glare to other road users and backdazzle to you, the driver, that results from these "retrofits".

HID headlamps also require careful weatherproofing and electrical shielding because of the high voltages involved. These unsafe "retrofits" make it physically possible to insert an HID bulb where a halogen bulb belongs, but this practice is illegal and dangerous, regardless of claims by these marketers that their systems are "beam pattern corrected" or the fraudulent use of established brand names to try to trick you into thinking the product is legitimate. In order to work correctly and safely, HID headlamps must be designed from the start as HID headlamps.

What about the law, what does it have to say on the matter? In virtually every first-world country, HID "retrofits" into halogen headlamps are illegal. They're illegal clear across Europe and in all of the many countries that use European ECE headlight regulations. They're illegal in the US and Canada. Some people dismiss this because North American regulations, in particular, are written in such a manner as to reject a great many genuinely good headlamps. Nevertheless, on the particular count of HID "retrofits" into halogen headlamps, the world's regulators and engineers agree: DON'T!
note his conclusion, one which I can't stress enough:

Originally posted by Daniel Stern
The only safe and legitimate HID retrofit is one that replaces the entire headlamp—that is lens, reflector, bulb...the WHOLE shemozzle—with optics designed for HID usage. In the aftermarket, it is possible to get clever with the growing number of available products, such as Hella's modular projectors available in HID or halogen, and fabricate your own brackets and bezels, or to modify an original-equipment halogen headlamp housing to contain optical "guts" designed for HID usage. But just putting an HID bulb where a halogen one belongs is bad news all around
silviaks2nr is offline  
Old 11-05-2006, 01:21 PM
  #2  
Contributing Member
Thread Starter
iTrader: (1)
 
silviaks2nr's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: NC
Posts: 3,273
Stern does not mention other problems with rebased hid kits, such as the quality (I guess he touches on that); the kelvin color temperature of many rebased kits, the excessive glare; the lack of beam pattern; and the noticeable hotspots in the beam.
feel free to read other articles by Stern on his site
http://www.danielsternlighting.com/home.html
some articles are opinionated which are open to interpretation. I do not agree with some of the safety discussions involved with oem hid optics (in particular the discussion between distance illumination, foreground lighting, and beam width)

Last edited by silviaks2nr; 11-05-2006 at 01:24 PM.
silviaks2nr is offline  
Old 11-05-2006, 03:44 PM
  #3  
Contributing Member
iTrader: (2)
 
RuizXIII's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2005
Location: New Jersey!
Posts: 2,653
God of HID thank you for the info, it is very......... enlightening (no pun intended)

I will be sure to discuss HIDs when the time is appropriate
RuizXIII is offline  
Old 11-05-2006, 05:17 PM
  #4  
Contributing Member
Thread Starter
iTrader: (1)
 
silviaks2nr's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: NC
Posts: 3,273
Name:  thetruth.jpg
Views: 350
Size:  46.1 KB
food for thought
silviaks2nr is offline  
Old 11-06-2006, 10:57 AM
  #5  
Contributing Member
 
ArticDragon's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: West Covina/ Irvine
Posts: 2,515
I pic showing bulbs of the same temp would be better.
ArticDragon is offline  
Old 11-06-2006, 01:54 PM
  #6  
Contributing Member
Thread Starter
iTrader: (1)
 
silviaks2nr's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: NC
Posts: 3,273
Originally posted by ArticDragon
I pic showing bulbs of the same temp would be better.
aftermarket rebased bulbs are produced under inconsitant conditions resulting in inconsitant color temps. However, i agree a lower color temp might give a more accurate result in terms of output, but would still show the same general beam irregularities (glare, hotspots, striations). Most people who buy rebased kits only buy them for looks and go for higher color temps which imulate high end cars "flickering" projector colorband characteristics.
silviaks2nr is offline  
Old 11-06-2006, 10:06 PM
  #7  
Contributing Member
 
Ayuaddict's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2005
Location: San Jose, CA
Posts: 3,096
great info i nominate for sticky
Ayuaddict is offline  
Old 11-06-2006, 10:59 PM
  #8  
Contributing Member
 
Waynehead05's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Dallas
Posts: 1,110
hidplanet.com

read people... read. and search. it HAS been covered on that site.
Waynehead05 is offline  
Old 11-07-2006, 11:08 PM
  #9  
Registered User
iTrader: (1)
 
Darkvillin's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Toms River, NJ & Conway, AR
Posts: 489
i love trying to talk lighting to my buddies. they are clue less and often look at me like i have six arms. silviaks2nr has been and will continue to be my idol.
Darkvillin is offline  
Old 11-08-2006, 02:39 AM
  #10  
Contributing Member
 
ArticDragon's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: West Covina/ Irvine
Posts: 2,515
Retrofits will always be better period.
ArticDragon is offline  
Old 11-08-2006, 12:25 PM
  #11  
Registered User
 
nightkid86's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: NC
Posts: 292
Silviaks, get me an HID retro for xmas
nightkid86 is offline  
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
onelownismo
S-Chassis Newbie / FAQs Forum
17
04-21-2009 07:00 AM
hatrick6
NA Motor
43
12-24-2008 09:04 PM
CharlesJ
Road Race/AutoX
1
08-28-2007 08:30 AM
Sinfestboy
General
7
04-25-2005 06:00 PM
pooptown
S-Chassis Newbie / FAQs Forum
7
11-20-2004 09:51 PM



Quick Reply: Why not to buy an hid kit/ general hid discussion



All times are GMT -7. The time now is 11:12 PM.