Fit Interior & Exterior Illumination Threads discussing interior and exterior lighting modifications for the Fit/Jazz

LED Replacement Headlamp Bulbs

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  #21  
Old 01-29-2018, 08:50 AM
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Here are part of the instructions that come with the LED:
Note the screw position when installing, and check, both right and left
should be in same position. There is a hood on the LED that does something
that makes it for low beam.
 
  #22  
Old 01-29-2018, 09:51 AM
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What was the consensus on superbrightlights needing resisters installed. Also I didnt see it mentioned, DRL comparable ?
 
  #23  
Old 01-29-2018, 02:31 PM
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Originally Posted by ercdvs
What was the consensus on superbrightlights needing resisters installed. Also I didnt see it mentioned, DRL comparable ?
I didn’t need them on my ‘15 EX.
 
  #24  
Old 02-09-2018, 05:50 AM
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Another gotcha might be the time needed to replace a non-standard setup if you have a failure.

OEM and things like Silverstars are available in most Walmart and auto parts stores.
 
  #25  
Old 02-09-2018, 11:47 AM
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I bought Sylvania Silverstar ULTRA 9003/H4 Pair Set from eBay for $26.39. I checked autozone and walmart, both were selling them for over $45/pair plus tax.
 
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Last edited by wasserball; 02-09-2018 at 11:50 AM.
  #26  
Old 02-09-2018, 01:30 PM
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Originally Posted by Bob Levine
Another gotcha might be the time needed to replace a non-standard setup if you have a failure.

OEM and things like Silverstars are available in most Walmart and auto parts stores.
I’m still carrying a spare set of halogen bulbs in the car in case I need to swap one out along the road.
 
  #27  
Old 02-09-2018, 06:07 PM
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Same here on the spare bulbs. Makes sense to be prepared.
 
  #28  
Old 02-10-2018, 10:32 AM
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Originally Posted by john21031
If you use any aftermarket LED bulb with the stock housing, you will be not only doing an illegal conversion, you will be reducing actual light performance and blinding oncoming drivers.

Your stock headlamp is designed to be used with the stock halogen bulb.
You have no legal, safe, and effective way of "having brighter headlights". The reason they as bright as they are is because it is the brightest you can legally have in this kind of passenger car.

Stay with the stock bulb, don't blind oncoming drivers, your don't want a minivan full of kids hitting you head on at 75 mph killing you and kids inside, do you? If not, read what I wrote above.
I agree with this, and also have a philosophical opinion.
IMO..there are two things Americans like to do.
Tinker...and make things "more".

We tend to default to "more" is always better. Or from a tinkering standpoint, that different is automatically better.

My feeling with the halogen bulbs is, what's wrong with them?
There is enough light to safely drive. There's comparative light capability to most vehicles on the road.

I don't feel I need to do conversions, or plug and play, to change for changes sake, and/or create more light. I just don't need to.

IMO, halogen bulbs do lose brightness with time. If they seem too dark to you? Just replace them...with similar product. There are aftermarket halogen bulbs that report to be "brighter" but are legal replacements.
 
  #29  
Old 02-10-2018, 10:47 AM
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back 20yrs ago such post may have made sense.. fortunately for the rest of us, it is 2018 and happy to try new things to improve parts of the car honda thought it could cut corners on. and headlights on the car is seriously lacking.
 
  #30  
Old 02-10-2018, 04:40 PM
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Originally Posted by fitchet
I agree with this, and also have a philosophical opinion.
IMO..there are two things Americans like to do.
Tinker...and make things "more".

We tend to default to "more" is always better. Or from a tinkering standpoint, that different is automatically better.

My feeling with the halogen bulbs is, what's wrong with them?
There is enough light to safely drive. There's comparative light capability to most vehicles on the road.

I don't feel I need to do conversions, or plug and play, to change for changes sake, and/or create more light. I just don't need to.

IMO, halogen bulbs do lose brightness with time. If they seem too dark to you? Just replace them...with similar product. There are aftermarket halogen bulbs that report to be "brighter" but are legal replacements.
Well, heck, for that matter what was wrong with acetylene headlamps? Why use those newfangled electric lights when carbide lamps were good enough for grandpa?
 
  #31  
Old 02-11-2018, 08:01 AM
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Hey, I'm not knocking anyone who wants to "tinker" and make those changes.
But two things....most cars being produced and sold in 2018...still have Halogen Bulbs. So I'm not saying let's embrace a unused or outdated technology here. It's still the majority used system.

And we are talking about "Light"...I find Halogen output to be perfectly adequate.

When we get to, and we may, the point where vehicles are produced from the factory with LED headlights (Yes, I know some are)...but when that becomes the majority.
People will have to find other things to tinker with.

For me, personally, the "upgrade" is simply not worth the work. And as noted by others...can even be illegal. And I also don't embrace the rather North American approach that "more" or "brighter"- is necessarily better. Not to mention, the blinding light to oncoming cars can be dangerous, illegal. Plus some videos I have watched show that the light isn't even really brighter, just more scattered because you are adapting the wrong technology to a halogen bulb desinged housing.

But by all means, if you've got the money to spend, the time to apply, the desire to light up like a Casino on a Vegas strip, my personal philosophy isn't going to stop you.

But my bottom line is the unanswered question. What's wrong with the Halogen Bulb? It's what the vehicle has been safely designed to use. Replacement is relatively easy, and inexpensive, and IMO the light produced is perfectly adequate.

Wanting to "keep up" with other vehicles designed from blue print to have LED's IMO is not reason enough to make your vehicle dangerous on the road.

OK..maybe I am knocking people who want to make these changes.
 

Last edited by fitchet; 02-11-2018 at 08:28 AM.
  #32  
Old 02-11-2018, 07:07 PM
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Despite the different opinions here, I hope we can all agree that blinding oncoming traffic is a bad thing, whether that comes from bulbs producing a bad pattern, having the stock bulbs adjusted too high, suspension lifted so high that headlights are at everyone else's eye level, or even driving with the high beams on all the time- which I see in my area at least as often as obnoxiously bad bulbs.

That being said, everyone's driving conditions are different. The amount and quality of street lights, average weather, the time of day when you do most of your driving, the type of road you commonly use, all make a difference. And none of those make as much difference as the eyes of the individual driver.

I'm trying to walk the middle line between blinding everyone around, and being able to see with eyes that aren't the best. If my eyes get bad enough that I have to blind everyone else to see normally, that will be the time to stop driving.
 
  #33  
Old 02-11-2018, 08:00 PM
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Originally Posted by fitchet
I agree with this, and also have a philosophical opinion.
IMO..there are two things Americans like to do.
Tinker...and make things "more".

We tend to default to "more" is always better. Or from a tinkering standpoint, that different is automatically better.

My feeling with the halogen bulbs is, what's wrong with them?
There is enough light to safely drive. There's comparative light capability to most vehicles on the road.

I don't feel I need to do conversions, or plug and play, to change for changes sake, and/or create more light. I just don't need to.

IMO, halogen bulbs do lose brightness with time. If they seem too dark to you? Just replace them...with similar product. There are aftermarket halogen bulbs that report to be "brighter" but are legal replacements.
My previous car, a 2010 Toyota Matrix, had noticeably better lighting, brighter, and better on the sides, when turning off one road onto another, to see where the sides of the new road are. It also had halogens, but it had 2 separate beams with 2 separate bulbs. I felt I had enough light in the Matrix; I feel that I don't have enough light, when driving the Fit. In my compinion, they have less light than cars with 2 separate beams, and I don't think the Fit has enough light to drive safely.

The aftermarket halogens cost almost as much as the LEDs. They are not really substantially brighter than the standard halogens. They have a slightly whiter light is the most of what's different. Also, they last a very short time, they are engineered to get slightly brighter light but last much shorter time, as to produce a little more light with the same wattage, the filament has to burn out a lot sooner.

LEDs, if you get the right ones, are a much better value. However you have to be careful as many of them have poor beams, since the LEDs aren't located so as to mimic the filaments. This is esp a problem in replacing dual-filament bulbs as the Fit's bulbs are. also, many of them aren't much brighter than the OEM halogens. And worse, many of them are labeled incorrectly as to how much light they actually produce. Some of them vastly exaggerate the amount of lumens, some of them are fairly truthful. So you have to be careful. Company's which sell you their cherry-picked LEDs like VLEDs, and are accurate about the number of lumens, often charge a lot more than similarly rated LEDs cost on amazon or ebay - some of which are rated truthfully and some of which are not. with name brand halogens, they are correctly labeled - but I don't think there are any that are substantially brighter than the OEMs, which I find to be quite inadequate and unsafe.

I figure I'll wait a little longer to see which brands stay on the market and which don't last, and hope that the prices go down. But meanwhile I don't like driving at night. When driving on main road and turning on to side road I have to go very slow on the main road, in order to see where the sides are of the side road, and thereby turn onto them without going into the ditch that is usually on each side, in my geographical area (there are no shoulders, and often the edge of the road is broken down, having eroded and fallen into the ditch) and I keep worrying that someone is going to come up behind me and rear-end me while I'm slowing down to see where the pavement on the side road actually ends.
 

Last edited by nomenclator; 02-11-2018 at 08:04 PM.
  #34  
Old 02-12-2018, 12:07 AM
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Originally Posted by nomenclator
LEDs, if you get the right ones, are a much better value. However you have to be careful as many of them have poor beams, since the LEDs aren't located so as to mimic the filaments. This is esp a problem in replacing dual-filament bulbs as the Fit's bulbs are. also, many of them aren't much brighter than the OEM halogens. And worse, many of them are labeled incorrectly as to how much light they actually produce. Some of them vastly exaggerate the amount of lumens, some of them are fairly truthful. So you have to be careful. Company's which sell you their cherry-picked LEDs like VLEDs, and are accurate about the number of lumens, often charge a lot more than similarly rated LEDs cost on amazon or ebay - some of which are rated truthfully and some of which are not. with name brand halogens, they are correctly labeled - but I don't think there are any that are substantially brighter than the OEMs, which I find to be quite inadequate and unsafe.
Precisely! I watched some of the videos on YouTube where they take a whole bunch of LEDs and comparison test them in a test car that they have. I was really surprised how many were not any where near as bright as claimed when measured and how many had poor beam patterns, capable of blinding oncoming traffic. The poor beam patterns also meant that they failed to deliver on promises of improving needed visibility for you even if they were overall brighter than the test car's original headlights.
 
  #35  
Old 03-01-2018, 08:35 PM
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Did the interior lights to LED, and now I just cant stand the headlights / fog lights. Just bought the headlight kit uncle gary did, and the fogs northcoast did. I hope you guys still like the bulbs and have zero issues
 
  #36  
Old 03-02-2018, 05:57 PM
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Originally Posted by ercdvs
Did the interior lights to LED, and now I just cant stand the headlights / fog lights. Just bought the headlight kit uncle gary did, and the fogs northcoast did. I hope you guys still like the bulbs and have zero issues
Still running the LED headlamp bulbs. No issues so far. Not one car has flashed me for being too bright or badly aimed. I also put LEDs in the interior and the license plate lights. I'm running yellow halogen H8 bulbs in the fog lamps.
 

Last edited by Uncle Gary; 03-02-2018 at 05:59 PM.
  #37  
Old 03-03-2018, 11:44 AM
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what is the real benefit of LED. I thought just for look cool (being white color).
 
  #38  
Old 03-03-2018, 02:01 PM
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Originally Posted by liukaitc
what is the real benefit of LED. I thought just for look cool (being white color).
No you can get LEDs that are just slightly whiter than halogen lamps, you can get yellowish looking LEDs, as well as "cool"-looking slightly bluish LEDs. Many people buy LEDs so that they see the road better. That is the only reason I would want them - other than to say to my friends, look, I can see the road better in my car than you can in your car. That is why I already have LEDs in my passenger cabin and cargo area - so I can see better inside the car. I choose 5000K color temperature from vleds.com. They also offer 6500K LEDs, bluer-looking, but I choose the "plain white." They are whiter than the original incandescents. Much like "daylight" fluorescents. Just plain white. I believe this color and the increased brightness improves how well I can see what is inside my car at night. If I stop to read a map, I can hardly see a thing with the original incandescents. If I want to find something in the cargo area - much easier with the LED. If my pen falls out of my pocket and lands between my seat and the center hump, I can find it more easily. I just turn on the map lights; I don't have to go searching for my flashlight in the center storage or glove storage area. I also tell everyone I know what I just said here, show them how bright my cabin is, and offer to put LEDs in their car for a very reasonable fee if they wish. I would expect folks with aging eyes to be more interested than youngsters. I have no doubt that at 25 I was sort of ok, but not happy, with croppy incandescents, but at 70 yo I find LEDs indespinsible. Actually, I remember even at about age 30 I added a 12 volt spot, about 2 inches in diameter, to my map light area, because I found the original incandescent map lights inadequate.

Also, being so much more efficient than incandescents, they take less ampere-hours out of your battery. Means I can leave the interior lights on for hours, without worrying about having trouble starting the car. Same thing would be true for headlight but not to the same degree. My interior lights are about 4 times as bright as the original incandescents, but they use only abuot 1/3 the amps, 1/3 the watts. Typical LED headlamps are about the same to about 2 twice as bright as original halogens, and according to published specs they use about 1/2 to 3/4 the amps.

Not sure why the LED headlamps don't seem as efficient as the interior lamps but I suspect the reason is that because they don't shine in a 360 degree cylinder as a filament does, not as much of the light they produce gets refected by the headlamp reflector, or focused by the lens. More light gets wasted. The ratio of lumens of output to the number of lux shining on the road, is greater for the halogens. So to compensate, to get the same number of lux on the road, with LEDs they make the amps used by the LEDs, and the lumens produced by the LEDs, greater. Anyway that is my hypothesis.
 

Last edited by nomenclator; 03-03-2018 at 02:34 PM.
  #39  
Old 03-08-2018, 10:51 AM
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Just installed a $36 LED from Amazon.. looks amazing.

Amazon Amazon

 
  #40  
Old 03-09-2018, 02:07 AM
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Originally Posted by wmo168
Just installed a $36 LED from Amazon.. looks amazing.

Amazon
But how do the function? Can you see better at night with the low beams? With the high beams?

Better than you could see with the oem incandescents? When turning from a main road onto a side road, I could not see the sides of the side road with the oem incandescents, unless I almost completely stopped in the main road and turned very very slowly. Since the roads where I live don't have white lines along the edges, and since there are no shoulders either, and instead there is just a kind of ditch that begins where the pavement ends, which I do not want to drive onto, the original incandescents are making it hard for me to drive at night. If I slow down on the main road, I keep on worrying that someone is going to rear-end me. Yes she would be liable for damages, but I still don't want it to happen; I don't want the disruption it would cause.

The Amazon ad describes the Beamtech lamps as being 32 volt! My Fit has a 12 volt battery and the regulated voltage from the alternator is around 14 volts. A 32 volt lamp would not be suitable. If they have the wrong number here, why should I trust them to have the correct lumens posted? Or the correct color temperature?

By the way 2000 lumens for low beam of each lamp and 2000 for high beam, is not a lot more light than the original incandescents, which are about 1200 high beams, 900 low beams. https://www.brandsport.com/sylv-9003su.html And I do not think that 2000 lumens is twice as bright as 1000 lumens. And I think that the lumens are measured at the source, the at the filament or LED, and that that doesn't necessarily correspond to the amount of light that the reflectors reflect onto the road.
 

Last edited by nomenclator; 03-09-2018 at 02:20 AM.


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