projectors with hids??
#1
i have projector headlights in my 06 silverado and was wanting to get hids put in them but a local shop told me they would melt the headlights. is this really true? and if it is what is bright bulb i can put in them or what kind of hids in them because thats what i really want!!
#3
50w Premium Canbus DSP Kits - DistantXtremes
Slap a set in and call it a day. You can find cheaper kits like DDM but you can't beat quality. I recommend sticking to the 4300-5000k range (anything else has less light)
Whichever shop said you'd melt the headlights simply meant they don't know jack about HIDs and equate brightness to heat.
Slap a set in and call it a day. You can find cheaper kits like DDM but you can't beat quality. I recommend sticking to the 4300-5000k range (anything else has less light)
Whichever shop said you'd melt the headlights simply meant they don't know jack about HIDs and equate brightness to heat.
Last edited by Suburbazine; Feb 6, 2014 at 08:21 PM.
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#10
No. You're safe inside the 4300-5500k range. 6000 is getting a tinge of blue (in some kits it's REALLY blue) and anything past that is too blue, IMO.
If the kit ballasts are plain silver or black metal with no stickers or labels regarding output or manufacturer, the kit is in the $30 range (Like DDMTuning). If it's a slim kit (ballasts about 0.5" thick) then it's probably a 35w kit. I'm not a fan of "slim" kits as the ballasts lack heat dissipation and some arc regulation hardware (meaning they don't last as long).
If the kit ballasts are plain silver or black metal with no stickers or labels regarding output or manufacturer, the kit is in the $30 range (Like DDMTuning). If it's a slim kit (ballasts about 0.5" thick) then it's probably a 35w kit. I'm not a fan of "slim" kits as the ballasts lack heat dissipation and some arc regulation hardware (meaning they don't last as long).
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