DivideBYZero
Lifer
- May 18, 2001
- 24,117
- 2
- 0
It's not even a Focus, it's an aged Escort. Don't bother or just buy them some of those shitty blue tint regular bulbs to make them happy.
I like the "white" light that my HID gives off rather than the "yellow" from standard halogen. Also, I find that HID are more reflective so I can see the eyes off people and animals more clearly and any road reflector glow like they are radioactive.
Although the lowbeam power is pretty weak compared to halogen, highbeam lights up everything in front of my car like daylight.
As for the OP, I would go OEM or don't bother. Unless you MUST have the lights, I'd spend that $400 elsewhere.
A standard halogen will reflect off of most "reflective" surfaces just fine. I live in the woods. I can see deer eyes at night extremely easy with stock halogens on a 2005 Grand Prix. As well as every other car I've had before. As well as road signs, even annoyingly bright to be honest. If you really need more light coming back at you from animal eyes, you might need your own eyes checked.
And HIDs will even do a better job. My friends live on top of a moutain in Maine. Whenever I drive up there at night, there's always animals crossing the road. When I got a new car with HIDs it lighted the whole road, tremendous difference. Don't think I can go back to a car without them.
Absolutely NONE of the items listed on that page is a "kit" in any true sense. You CANNOT simply drop a HID bulb into any old housing, even if you hack the bulb with a different base. You need an ENTIRE HOUSING designed for HID bulbs.
The "kits" you have linked are ILLEGAL for on-road use and will result in unacceptable beam patterns and severely excessive glare for oncoming drivers. Only someone who was a complete idiot would buy them. The fact that the site is selling re-based bulbs is a dead giveaway that they're selling crap and have a target audience of morons, and the fact that they offer "bi-xenon" kits for single-bulb housings simply confirms this.
ZV
While for the case of this shady site this is true, often modern Bi-Xenon units are in one housing. They utilise a shutter system to alter the beam spread when selecting high beam. My 120d does this.
While for the case of this shady site this is true, often modern Bi-Xenon units are in one housing. They utilise a shutter system to alter the beam spread when selecting high beam. My 120d does this.