Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hey all.

I want to get some Deep bright blue Headlights for my nissan skyline R33. I want parkers, low beam and high beam,

I tried the repco ones " Ultra Blue".

But no luck, they aren't as blue as i want them,

And yes i know Blue is illegal,

Does anyone know where i can buy these from? Any Help would be great

Thank you

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/322790-blue-headlightscan-anyone-help/
Share on other sites

  • Replies 46
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

I was waiting for someone to say that, Lol,

To be honest, i just like them, like the look of blue and the view they give you

it's also good how they glare into the eyes of oncoming driver NOT!!!!!

hence why they are illegal

Also you many have a problems using 8000K + i have seen peoples headlights melt because they are such a hot light.

Skylines healights are only plastic not glass or of high quality plastics like Merc and such. i know 6000k is safe but 8000k is a pretty hot light and they can melt the plastic in the headlight if your not careful with the Kelvin rating you pick.

Also you many have a problems using 8000K + i have seen peoples headlights melt because they are such a hot light.

Skylines healights are only plastic not glass or of high quality plastics like Merc and such. i know 6000k is safe but 8000k is a pretty hot light and they can melt the plastic in the headlight if your not careful with the Kelvin rating you pick.

Thanks for letting me know

all over ebay

eg; http://cgi.ebay.com.au/H1-8000K-HID-Philip...=item2ea92be28f

get ready to be pulled over and defected though. also, dont drive anywhere it's too dark, coz you wont be able to see shit.

+1. i've driven a skyline that had really blue lights as the high beams. it was terrible. while they lit up a decent distance, trying to actually make anything out was hard. low beams were actually better for seeing off into the distance than the highbeams were.

once you go above 4000k in a conventional bulb you start losing light.

my advice is to stop being a ricer and get lights that allow you to actually see where you are going

Also you many have a problems using 8000K + i have seen peoples headlights melt because they are such a hot light.

Skylines healights are only plastic not glass or of high quality plastics like Merc and such. i know 6000k is safe but 8000k is a pretty hot light and they can melt the plastic in the headlight if your not careful with the Kelvin rating you pick.

Kelvin rating has nothing to do with heat. You have no idea what you are on about.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • It's unfortunate what Tomei USA has done to Tomei's name in general. I'm very weary of ordering parts from them now. I only order direct from a Japanse source (e.g Nengun). At least their logos are different, so you end up knowing what you have. 
    • Update Issues 5 (plus #4) - 10 After making a claim about issue #4's missing part, DeAgostini Japan sent a whole new issue #4 and it arrived about 2 weeks after that. That was back in early March. It took another 4 weeks to receive issues 5 - 13 though. This update is for issues 5 - 10. Ove the 5 issues the front left suspension and most of the engine have been completed. The quality of the castings and fit of the parts is quite good, it seems better than DeAgostini's BNR34 Skyline GT-R from the Fast & Furious 2 movie, which (to me anyway) doesn't seem to have as tight tolerances or quite as accurate castings.  Each issue has a lot of info about the 1989 - 1993 Skyline range and other Nissan models from that era, but the focus is on the BNR32 Skyline GT-R Nismo and the various racing it did in Japan, Europe (Spa 24hrs) and of course Australia. I've included some text translated with Google Lens in some photos and will add to them if there's anything worth including. 
    • If it's for a SR20, make sure it's not the American Poncams, might as well call them Poocams. Had a set in a friend's car, all scuffed up after a few track days. Like the metallurgy Tomei USA used is junk. Went back to JDM OG Tomei Poncams, no issues till now.   Tomei USA is not the real OG Tomei.   Random rant over, fk the US of A, bunch of c u n t s. 
    • Most of the industry in North America either runs on Siemens or Allen Bradley. I have two redundant S7-1500's on my desk right next to me for simulation. Siemens has been losing ground though since Stuxnet, as cybersecurity is a big thing. In my line of work that is federally regulated, you must by law have a cybersecurity management program in place and its audited and inspected every so often.  I work with Emerson PLC's daily (RX3i's) and have done large biogas/refinery projects with their DCS's. Their PLC's are somewhat OK minus the way they do PLC redundancy (You have to download on both PLC's separately every time you make a change )  As for their DCS's... you'll be limited financially first before anything else stops you. Costs are exorbiant at roughly 10x what it would cost you to do with any other system (e.g AB PAC).  1990's, those suckers are brand new haha! Kraft-Heinz (An old client when I use to work for an ESP) still runs Siemens TI505 PLC's from the mid 80's. Ohh how I don't miss working with those... you could only do a certain number of online downloads until it's "Change" buffer would be full and you would then need to go offline to do a full download. There was no warning of when this was coming up and it generally would happen when you would go in at 2am to make changes before production -_-.     
×
×
  • Create New...