to those with aftermarket HIDs
C350 WITHOUT PII package.
1. On the headlight bulb harness of the stock low beam bulb (H7) there are a total of three wires on the harness. two of the wires going connect to one and a single wire on the other connetion. Which is the negative and which is the positive?
2. Many people that run aftermarket HID set ups just run the factory headlight harness through a harness w/a capacitor, than to the ballast than to the bulb. My question is since igniting the HID bulb takes a lot of voltage to ignite, the entire voltage is being drawn from the factory harness, with nobody running a protection relay to draw voltage from the battery, has anybody had fried wires or damage? does the capacitor hold enough voltage to be safe from fried wires?
3. Regarding questions two. I know the capacitor is like a small back up battery that holds voltage to be used when needed but it doesnt provide protection like a relay right?
4. I read many many posts about the bulb failure light that comes up without having a capacitor due to the HID running at at lower wattage 35w vs 55w i believe. My HID kit has an in built relay so that the igniting of the HID bulbs wont be directly from the wiring but rather pull voltage from the battery upon start up to protect the factory wiring from over draw BUT it only uses 2 spade connections (positive and negative) from only ONE side of the headlight harnesses (so either left side or right side) thus leaving the headlight bulb failure warning and lights automaticaly turning off. The harness also does have a capacitor built in to avoid flickering. This might be a stupid question if i split the spade connections to make a total of four spade connections (2 positive and 2 negative) so that i can plug into each headlight harness, would that make harnesses run at 110watts, i know it will still run at 12v just at different ohm i believe? Hope that made sense.
Any feedback is greatly appreciated. My HID kit is to arrive pretty soon and im just doing all my research to hopefully have a smooth install. Please dont tell me to not do this HID mod because THIS projector lens is meant for halogens and not HID's. Ive seen a picture of a C350 non HID against the wall about 25 ft and the beam cut off was nearly perfect with not much glare but of course its hard to tell without seeing it in person. In any case, advice is appreciated. Thanks in advance.
by the way, the kit pictured is not the one i have but just wanted to show what i mean.
http://i188.photobucket.com/albums/z...8/hidsetup.jpg
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of the beam against a wall....as well as one of the light on the pavement about
20' in front of the car? tnx
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
1. Drill a hole about 1/2" size and purchase a grommet or used supplied grommet (some kits)
2. Cut a groove big enough to pass the wiring throughout with out cutting the seal o-ring.




2nd pic is upon start up

3rd pic

4th pic beam cutoff, there is slight glare as you can see, not that bad though.

5th pic


7th pic is of my 07 R1 with the same brand digital HID kit, these projectors are bad *** and cut off is perfect.lights are white and nowhere near blue like the picture. its just the camera that makes it look that way.


8th pic beam cutt off, this is the bike not car.


Bikes headlights do not have driver side headlight to be lower like cars. its just flat all the way across. Hope this pics help. Again, the camera catches a lot of the glare which is not really there along with the color that throws it off.
value. Why shouldn't someone opine that the lower quality not be acceptable
for their car? That is also 'help.' Some folks are of the belief that only by
agreeing is one helpful....that pandering to each other's egos is the answer.
it's disengenuous to ask that 'any feedback is greatly appreciated' and then
tell folks who have, to **** up a rope.
Though the photos are far from OEM in beam precision, as well as illegal, the
examples shown in the photos are admittedly better than many others I have
seen and made from HID kits. Hard to be sure as photos can be skewed in
their presentation depending on exposure settings. You did mention that
there may be lots more glare than that shown in the photos - is still still true?
If the pavement your car was on (in the photos) level, and you've backed
off the requisite 2 dozen feet or so, I'd recommend that you dip the beam
a little, as they appear to be level or rising.
tnx for the shots. I'll save these as examples from/of your kit in OEM fixtures.
I don't disagree with those who convert it though. If they can do a good job of it, I applaud them.
What I think the biggest complain should be: Mercedes-Benz needs to start putting these on every Mercedes-Benz standard!
Last edited by daniel123588; Apr 4, 2008 at 02:45 AM.

Now I dont know how to use the voltameter. Can anyone help please.








