Although I appreciated the increase in light from my HID headlight mod, I never liked the fact that it was focused very poorly. After some research I found a LED bulb that was specifically made to fit in the H4 headlight shell, so its emitters are in the same place as the halogen filaments. As you will see, it was ALMOST plug-n-play...
It IS very bright and well-focused. Much improved over the stock bulb.
Here’s some specs (per bulb):
- 2100lm low beam 3000lm high beam total output
- 50% increase over halogen
- MT-G2 CREE Chip
- More focused beam pattern
- Current Draw 2.5A @ 12V = 30W
- 12-24V constant current driver
- Waterproof driver and fan connectors level IP65
- Over-heat Fan Failure Protection
- Fan Life 25000hrs
I found the unit here:
http://www.vleds.com/headlights/led/h4-9003-hb2.htmlWhen I bought the unit a couple of weeks ago, they had a single bulb for a motorcycle at half the price shown on the above link. That has disappeared, so it looks like for now, two purchasers should go in on the buy or call the company to find out when singles will again be available.
I encountered a challenge in doing the install. A very stupid challenge! As everyone who’s worked with headlights knows, the H4 base has a flat area on one side of its circle. This flat mates with a corresponding blocked circle of the headlight shell’s receptacle, so the installed unit cannot rotate.
Well, wonder of wonders, the manufacturers of this LED unit, supplied it with a completely round base! No way would it fit into the headlight reflector receptacle. When I called the company, they were totally unaware of the issue and gave me permission to modify the unit in order to make it fit, without voiding my warranty. The man I spoke to was very nice. I have NO idea how such an obvious error could have slipped through what appears to be a very well-crafted piece of kit.
Using a sliding caliper, I measured the stock H4 bulb’s distance from the bottom of the round area to the flat, locked the caliper’s jaws in place, and used it to scribe a line on the new LED unit. Then, using a fine-toothed hacksaw, after clamping the housing firmly to a workbench, I very gently sawed a groove across the raised circular base until I got near the larger flat area. At that point, I held the hacksaw at 90 degrees to the first cut and cut down to meet the groove, removing the offending portion. In lieu of a milling machine, this crude approach proved effective if not pretty.
Here’s the LED installed:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/10852133@N02/14074587959/in/set-72157632567075439And here’s the “ballast” which I zip-tied to the instrument cluster bracket:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/10852133@N02/14074602728/in/set-72157632567075439The hole in the wiring nest is where the fan and fins on the back of the bulb fits.