HID kit 35w or 55w?
I am a new member but have been peeking around this great website for a while now. I am about to buy a HID kit for my 1997 E320, not only because I don't like the looks of halogen lights but because I need better lighting at night since I drive in rural areas for about 1 hour every night. I am probably buying the HID kit from DDM tuning, but my question is will I get a Lamp Malfunction error with the 35w kit or not? My understanding is that 55w kit won't throw an error, but I would rather have the 35w kit because 55w kit is too bright in my opinion.
Any experience or advice?
Thank you
inserting D2S bulbs into your reflector which is designed for a halogen bulb's
focal point will screw up the beam quality and introduce glare to other
drivers. You can try to shim the bulb in/out but I've not tried that myself.
Someone in the 203 forum posted similarly (DDM kit) and his was totally
giddy at the output and how much better the beam lights up the road
signs. ....until I pointed out that this is happening due to the glare and
the mismatched projector bulb which he installed within a halogen spec-ed
enclosure.
most folks don't seem to care about the glare these high output bulbs produce
if not carefully fitted, which is unfortunate.
I've not heard 9many folks on 210 using the DDM kit so I dont know if they
will be able to give you first hand info regarding 'bulb malfunction' msg.
To resolve this myself, i used OEM parts. HIDs in 210s were Hellas, so I
sourced the same when I put my HID headlights together. I used projector
from a 210 E55 and fitted that into a Depo/Taiwan shell. good lighting,
great full beam in HIGH mode, and no error messages.
good luck....and do consider the quality of light and how it impacts other
drivers.
to do with whatever the threshold has been set and designed in the circuit.
one really doesn't know becuase it's a simple electronic issue of 'load'.
hypothisizing: if the triggering mechanism detects high resistance (or low
load) outside the envelope and scope of what it expects to see, i.e. typical
H7 bulb load, it triggers the light.
I avoided it by selecting and replicating the load used by OEM parts. with
DDM, you never know what the electrical/electronic specifications will do
unless it is measured....or simple plugged in and sampled.
the latter is what i was obscurely trying to refer to when I said that there
really hasn't been anyone on 210 forum posting that they've used the DDM
kit......or scared to for fear of provoking OHLORD (forum member known for
strong opinions on lighting), having his blood pressure skyrocket....who then
responds in kind. LOL
if you visit 203 forum, you'll see many folks sharing their experiences with
the DDM kit, some who are asking for problems solving assistance, and
others who are using the kit successfully. i'm aware that such comparisons
(203 v 210) are apples / oranges though.
Last edited by raymond g-; Jan 19, 2010 at 05:36 PM.

Don't do it.You waste your money.You won't see any further.
It matters not that you blind other drivers,it matters that you will not achieve the desired results.
Spend the bucks(like $800 or so and folllow Rays instrucions on Depo conversions Or put them'( the waste of time kits) back in the box and hope to God they give you a refund(which they won't)

Let me go back to sleep now.Thanks
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Get the 35W kit, the 55W may run too hot for a small housing.
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band can be wide. because the out-of-focus issue, the method you suggest
to 'correct' this places the majority of the HID's useful beam on the pavement.
you're now driving and using the glare portion of the vertical beam, which by
now, has diminished in lumens to where it arguably is back to that of a
good halogen beam but with the higher color temperature. since your eyes
are not good measures of lumens, it is easily fooled by color temperature
and continues to tell your mind that '...wooohoo, I have an HID...'
my disagreement with your advice is that it oversimplifies a much more
complex cause and effect, and casually suggests an amateurish fix,
notwithstanding the issue of legality.
What an ***.
Driving down the road with beams aimed 5 feet in front of the car is hardly installed properly,is poor lighting,is posing.You must be in the 17-22year old bracket that they market those cheap burpel
sets to.
Its amazing how everyone with HID lights is 22 years old and drives a civic.
I recently installed a kit from xenithxenons.com and it works perfectly. It is a 6000K kit, it has just a hint of blue, almost silver, if silver was a color of light. I double checked the "aim" of the light, following the procedure in my manual, and the aim was perfect.
Only the the bulb is changed, not the reflector or housing, or anything that would change the angle of the light.
The light is certainly brighter, but out wide, not up high. Street sign reflect more and now appear clear farther down the road.
I have yet to have someone in front of flip their mirror or shield their eyes or oncoming traffic flip me hi beams.








