dodge man
Super Star Member
If you’ve ever looked it up in a shop manual it shows how to adjust the headlights to spec. Usually aimed at a garage door or wall.
New models of the Ford F150s (maybe the 250s and 350s also but, I don't know) have self adjusting headlights when the nose tips up due to the backend being lowered due to towing/hauling.Euro spec cars have adjustable headlights that work quite well.
Must be a regulation preventing USA vehicles from having this feature.
And there is no way of adjusting them. I carry a snowsled in back most of the winter. It used to be SOP to pull up to the garage door in fall and adjust them down; then back up in the spring. Now I just blind oncoming drivers... Sorry folks, nothing I can do about it.
Don't know about other vehicles but my Tundra has a little wheel on the dash to adjust the headlight vertically from normal position downward to compensate for loads in the bed.Euro spec cars have adjustable headlights that work quite well.
Must be a regulation preventing USA vehicles from having this feature.
I will have to check my company truck for that. (2019 Tundra)Don't know about other vehicles but my Tundra has a little wheel on the dash to adjust the headlight vertically from normal position downward to compensate for loads in the bed.
I believe that a lot, if not most of the new led light bars people are using do not meet DOT specs. Most if not all of the units I've seen online only talk about off-road use.
Yep, most lightbars are illegal and never meet DOT specs.I totally disagree.
A 2007 Toyota Prius comes with token "fog" lights which are little more than white parking lights.
Every 3/4 ton truck I have seen comes with blinding "auxiliary" lights in what most drivers call the "fog light" mode.
DOT/NHTSA/CFR definition of "high beam headlights" is more than 2 filaments illuminated. Fox/Auxiliary lights are legally high beams whether or not the blue indicator is illuminated on the dash.
I put a kit from The Retrofit Source | The Best Brands in Automotive Lighting in my 2009 Tacoma a couple years after getting it. back in the day they were allegedly the best source for HID stuff. Worked pretty well, but had to replace the controller board once (under warranty I believe) & one of the connections is occasionally flakey. Sold the truck a few years ago, but still work with the new owner. They had a pile of different kits at various price & quality levels. I think these days there are a lot of aftermarket housings for HID bubs. Lots of them are cheap & don't even have proper projectors. HID requires really high voltages, so they have a ballast between the 12v & bulb, just like a fluorescent light.As others have noted, most if not all U.S. vehicles have adjustable headlights. They seem to have done away with horizontal adjustments, but they still have vertical. I suppose a corner could have been cut in the manufacture of Jstpssng's truck, but I'd venture a guess that the adjuster is just not obvious.
No kidding. I've got 'em set as low as they'll go in my truck, and it's still brighter than I'd like.
I suppose if you're buying new, but not always possible when buying used.
Does anyone make a retrofit HID that isn't junk? I read somewhere they use a voltage higher than 12V.
Fog lights are not high beams by a long shot. There's a reason the factory ones only work with the low beams.DOT/NHTSA/CFR definition of "high beam headlights" is more than 2 filaments illuminated. Fox/Auxiliary lights are legally high beams whether or not the blue indicator is illuminated on the dash.
You should clock the projectors correctly before resealing the housing.Aligning the cutoff on the projectors when they are on low beams was kind of tedious & I never felt super happy with my results. Mostly due to parallax & the dogleg for the cutoff on the right side of the road when in low beams rarely lining up depending on the distance.