Anyone still think Halogens better than xenons?
first you had the reflector, then the projector was added which found was a very very good way to disperse light better and more evenly.
Right away autoleveling systems were integrated to control the beam. with 3 times the light a reliable method to ensure that the light was correctly aimed was quickly brought in...autoleveling was added
Then they a solenoid was placed in conjunction with the cutoff shield and came out with bixenon, one of the best additions yet. Allowed xenon light to go from the legal cutoff restrictions to a full effective bright high beam
then they added an axis and directional mount came out with dynamic xenons, to better light an upcoming corner
not to mention the various systems that power all of this D2 (original) D1 (ignitor built into bulb) D4 (mercury free, slightly more light, and more efficient)
I do know that the color of Xenon lighting actually doesnt do so well or as well as halogen in rainy weather, combine rain with dark asphalt pavement and your 3x output disappears. A good halogen setup will outperform, the color performs better. thats also why alot of cars used to use Yellow fogs, as the yellow light would be more visable in these conditions.
I think there are alot of people out there that arent getting the benefits of xenon lighting, while yea the color to some is more attractive, the greater the color the less light (not referring to the color spectrum at cutoff) but the overall K-temperature of the light the xenon salt is emitting. I detail cars and get alot of cars with xenon's systems that are 8+ years old, these cars while the lights still fire up. Have heavily colorshifted bulbs, I bet halogen systems out there are putting out more light. A new set of bulbs would do WONDERS to this, and easily put out 2x more light.
anyway With all that being said...Anyone still think Halogens are better?
Last edited by donjuan45i; Mar 25, 2008 at 03:01 AM.
I'm in the Pgh, PA area and we sure get our fair share of rain. My Xenons perform better in the rain as well.
Just my own experience.

In my opinion the advantage of xenons is even more the beam width even if the beam coverage to the front is also useful. This may not be important everywhere and you may not even notice this difference if you don't compare two cars or see some car tests that show this clearly.
The article was funny, sort of assuming that the extra light from xenons would be put to the near front, which of course isn't good. But why would a good manufacturer do this for xenons (and not for halogens). The light pattern of course needs to be designed properly, as it is done on MBs, both in the case of xenons as well as halogens, within the the power each has.
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