I went into town last night for a bit of late night shopping, and I'm glad I've got HID's! Flashed a few people in cars who didn't seem to care that there was a bike coming their way. Gives them the 'I'm here' message real quick!
I went into town last night for a bit of late night shopping, and I'm glad I've got HID's! Flashed a few people in cars who didn't seem to care that there was a bike coming their way. Gives them the 'I'm here' message real quick!
I had only just dipped coming into town and this car seemed intent on pulling out of a side street to wipe me out, so I flashed them up at him. They do 'flash' when you turn onto high beam but then seem to go out and come up slow. It's kind of like a flash from a camera that gets their attention very quick! I always use my pass to warm them up before putting onto high, cause I don't like the sea of blackness that greets me when they are cold.
And, yes, flashing normal highbeam would probably work as well... but have you seen the Hyo lights when on?
Mine passed the WOF too.![]()
Here's the deal, as I see it.
Before you rush out and buy an HID kit, there are things you can do to make sure you're lighting is as good as possible.
Firstly, make sure your headlight lens is as clean as possible, and your headlight is properly adjusted. See if a relay is fitted - even a standard headlight will benefit from having a reasonable gauge of wires from the battery to a relay situated as near to the headlihgt as possible, with the same gauge wires going to the plug on the back of the bulb.
Make sure the bulb plug contacts are clean and have no corrosion on them.
Even if this proves to make no real difference to the lighting, at least you've prepared things for an upgrade.
Many bikes (especially Hondas) have fairly wussy bulbs fitted, and it's relatively cheap to fit higher wattage ones. However, if the bulbs are not standard H4s, you will need to get an adapter ring. Alternatively, you can cut the two lower tabs of the H4 bulb off, or bend them over a small piece of stiff wire or nail so they fit the slots in the factory bulb housing.
DON'T buy blue bulbs: they look brighter, but this is because the human eye finds light in the blue part of the spectrum glarey. The actual useful light for the same wattage is therefore less, especially in rainy or foggy conditions.
If the reflectors or lenses are crap, you will still have crap lighting, even if you fit 300W bulbs! In this case, you will have to go for aftermarket headlamps. I had a 90/130W bulb in my VF500, and it was very good (glass lense, glass or metal reflector). The exact same bulb in the VTR (polycarbonate lens) wasn't anywhere near as good. Plus corrosion on the plug partially melted the plug, due to the increased resistance creating heat. Oops...
The VFR has dual headlamps, and they're great. They're fitted with Honda/H4 adapter rings, and (I think) are 60/55 bulbs, which are quite adequate. Standard is 45/45W which is not. Relays are fitted as standard.
If I was doing a lot of riding at night, I'd fit some slightly higher wattage bulbs, say 80W or 90W, and maybe a pair of small driving lights to fill in if I needed it. There's too much crap (dual Fiamms, speedo corrector, gargre door opener, extra relays) under the fairing already to fit an HID unit.
... and that's what I think.
Or summat.
Or maybe not...
Dunno really....![]()
HID's look like just like a near lightning strike when they first switch on cold. Any signage in front of you, trees next to you, car number plates, etc etc all give a substantial hard blink when when you give the tiniest flick on the pass switch. Even with your back to the vehicle that strobed the area, it is still "WTF was that? - people turn around.."
They are funny as fuck to play with. Even without the added safety aspect (you look like a freight train with an insane magnesium flare on the front), they are just so out-there in daily use. You can always make someone look around them wondering where the lightning is.
There is also a smaller Inverter unit that is about half the height of a pack of cards. It's much easier to mount this.
Steve
"I am a licenced motorcycle instructor, I agree with dangerousbastard, no point in repeating what he said."
"read what Steve says. He's right."
"What Steve said pretty much summed it up."
"I did axactly as you said and it worked...!!"
"Wow, Great advise there DB."
WTB: Hyosung bikes or going or not.
You wont get the full benefit of hid's putting them in non hid reflectors, and if you cause a accident at night because of your super bright hid's illegilly fitted, it lights out for you.
"I am a licenced motorcycle instructor, I agree with dangerousbastard, no point in repeating what he said."
"read what Steve says. He's right."
"What Steve said pretty much summed it up."
"I did axactly as you said and it worked...!!"
"Wow, Great advise there DB."
WTB: Hyosung bikes or going or not.
Hella make a =90% now, I have that in my bike an no complaints at all, I have an HID I was going to fit before that but then learnt of ?legalities...still have it
This is the best HID low/hi set up, only one filiment that only needs to warm up once
These will be the +90% now available in NZ get the thumbs up from me.
See earlier comment about single filiment HID globes
Last thing, the globes come different Hz,s from 4100 to 6300 and up....8000 and 12000...something like that. Opt for the lowest 4100 or 6300...they are closest to natural light, the higher numbers are blue and harsh, are are diminishing in value but increasing in pose power....
You are right, but then you don't get to play with them, and thats half the fun. Also, the flasher is much slower.
Yes. 4,000k is honey gold, 6,000k is more like burning magnesium, 8,000k is deep blue. I prefer 6,000k but 8,000k would be fun to play with. Search youtube for "HID color temperature".
Steve
"I am a licenced motorcycle instructor, I agree with dangerousbastard, no point in repeating what he said."
"read what Steve says. He's right."
"What Steve said pretty much summed it up."
"I did axactly as you said and it worked...!!"
"Wow, Great advise there DB."
WTB: Hyosung bikes or going or not.
Someone ask what happens if you cause an accident because of the illegal bright lights:
DB says you pay ya money
He normally says if you cause an accident - run and hide:
Basically - thats why you need to have insurance - there are uninsured people (like DB) out there who believe that despite being in the wrong - they would leave you high and dry.
Thanks for info Al,have just ordered phillips extreme H7,based on GB25.00POUND so works out reasonably priced at maybe $70NZ.Haven't been able to find them here,and the 2 main outlets(not auto sparkies)when I ask them about give me blank looks,can get +80 for the car H4,but H1,H7 perplexes them.Thanks again for the link,after tonight need something a little bit better than stock.
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Hello officer put it on my tab
Don't steal the government hates competition.
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