Another LED or Halogen light question

   / Another LED or Halogen light question #1  

gabrichter

Bronze Member
Joined
Jan 2, 2012
Messages
56
Location
South Dakota
Tractor
2012 Kubota B2920
B2920 adding 1 good flood light on rear for blowing snow in the dark with 3 pt blower. I have had a 55w halogen light on current New Holland TZ25DA worked OK and could take off and put on B2920 but heard about the LED floods. Are they brighter and if so what wattage should I go with one larger LED or two smaller LED on each side of ROPS? B2920 will have standard alternator.
 
   / Another LED or Halogen light question #2  
You will definitely notice a difference with the LED lights. You can find some less expensive LEDs on Ebay, or go with the Rigid, Vision X, etc. LED's. I recently installed two Rigid D2 Duallys on my Ranger - they are small but rated at 2600 lumens each. They are a combo of flood and spot but you can get them in all spot or all flood as well.

Check out the Rigid website and you can see the difference in all of their models in the videos.
 
   / Another LED or Halogen light question #3  
I agree with 1bush2hog on the Rigid Industries lights. I have four Dually D2's driving spots on the front and two Dually's with diffused lenses on the rear of my B2620. They work really well for snowblowing in the winter months when it gets dark earlier, and plus their draw is really low, especially if you still have the stock 14-amp dyno (the 40-amp alternator is an option.) The only major drawback is their cost, but I guess you get what you pay for! :)

244852d1325735473-b2620-cab-installation-modifications-img_0786.jpg


246922d1326821828-b2620-cab-installation-modifications-img_0827.jpg
 
   / Another LED or Halogen light question #4  
I purchased 18W LED 4" round work lights. For light intensity, the lumen output is what is important. You want at least a lumen output of about 1300 lumens to provide the lighting you are looking for.

I personally like a a full flooding of light, so I chose 2 for the front and 2 for the rear of my tractor.

The front ones I purchased from the following website:
Semi-Truck, Trailer, Bus LED Light Bulbs

The ones I got are about 1/3 of the way down on the page with the following specs ($49.99 each):
LED Power: 18W
. Operating Voltage: 10-30V DC
. Luminous: 1380Lum
. Waterproof rate: IP 67
. Current draw 1.4A @ 12V,0.70A@24V
. Optional Color: Black
. Color Temperature: 6500K
. Material: Diecast aluminum housing
. Pmma lens
. Beam: Wide flood beam pattern
. Size: 128mm*116mm*43mm


The rear I purchased very similar ones from ebay....I got the pair of them for a total of $75 shipped and I'm quite happy with them as well.

IMG_6870Custom.jpg


IMG_6837Custom.jpg
 
   / Another LED or Halogen light question #5  
OMG.. Those Dually's seem like the answer I'm looking for.

I've been looking on fleabay and Amazon but have not come across those Dually's.

Yes, they ARE expensive, but it is true that you get what you pay for.

I was looking at some CREE 27Watt LED which run about $180/pair.

Amazingly, the Amp draw for the CREE lights is the same as the Dually (maybe even slightly more) but the CREE give 2000 Lumens compared to the Dually's with 2600 Lumens.

The Dually states they are "Raw Lumens" whatever that means.

I hope it is truly an apples to apples comparison in terms of lumens.

I use the lights mostly when blowing snow, but if I had better light, I would cut grass after sunset too.

I have a B2150 with that darn small Dymo which only puts out about 12.5-13 AMPS.

A pair of the LED lights would draw 4 amps. I wonder if the Dyno can support that along with the headlights and rear marker light ?

Otherwise, I may have to consider an Alternator upgrade and swallow the $600 upgrade cost. I want to avoid that and that's why I started looking for LED's in the first place.
 
   / Another LED or Halogen light question #6  
I personally like my halogen lights that were supplied with my tractor...i can see at night great with them. Ive played around with LED's for building lighting, and i have to say the've come along nicely in the past few years.

But personally im waiting till their prices drop alot more than they are now. If you could get by with halogen lights for the time being (meaning the alternator can support it0 id go that way till LED technology and $$$ get inline. If your alternator cant handle it...go LED.

I went with a Whelen LED emergency light even though it was more costly than a halogen ONLY because the circuit i was attaching it to was already run and couldn't handle the halogens draw.

I myself have had issues with LED lights burning out WAY before their advertised 20,000 - 50,000 hour ratings....

I had a work light burn out 1/2 their lamps in 2 months.
 
   / Another LED or Halogen light question #7  
I personally like my halogen lights that were supplied with my tractor...i can see at night great with them. Ive played around with LED's for building lighting, and i have to say the've come along nicely in the past few years.

But personally im waiting till their prices drop alot more than they are now. If you could get by with halogen lights for the time being (meaning the alternator can support it0 id go that way till LED technology and $$$ get inline. If your alternator cant handle it...go LED.

I went with a Whelen LED emergency light even though it was more costly than a halogen ONLY because the circuit i was attaching it to was already run and couldn't handle the halogens draw.

I myself have had issues with LED lights burning out WAY before their advertised 20,000 - 50,000 hour ratings....

I had a work light burn out 1/2 their lamps in 2 months.

I also went with 50w Hobbs halogen flood lights. I looked at the LED lights and really wasn't impressed (mainly because of the vast price difference). If I was limited due to battery/ generator then I would rethink halogen. Getting the right light is as important as how much light it puts out. A lot of Halogen lights are 'spot' and work fine on a vehicle traveling at 50mph. But for a tractor you really want a 'wide flood'. Good lights will list both side to side and top to bottom in degrees to let you know how wide of a beam they put out.
 
   / Another LED or Halogen light question #8  
I also went with 50w Hobbs halogen flood lights. I looked at the LED lights and really wasn't impressed (mainly because of the vast price difference). If I was limited due to battery/ generator then I would rethink halogen. Getting the right light is as important as how much light it puts out. A lot of Halogen lights are 'spot' and work fine on a vehicle traveling at 50mph. But for a tractor you really want a 'wide flood'. Good lights will list both side to side and top to bottom in degrees to let you know how wide of a beam they put out.

Yup, i did some snow plowing last night...man was it sweet having the light up high and the plow and area in front all highlighted.

was sweet. also nice to plow in bunny slippers and t shirt :laughing:
 
   / Another LED or Halogen light question #9  
I'm not a fan of LED's in general because of the "temperature" of the light. But as another source you can also check out DDM Tuning. They make some very nice and affordable HID and LED lights.
I've got some of their 9 x 3w 2000 LED's and they're pretty sick.
j
 
   / Another LED or Halogen light question #10  
I'm not a fan of LED's in general because of the "temperature" of the light. But as another source you can also check out DDM Tuning. They make some very nice and affordable HID and LED lights.
I've got some of their 9 x 3w 2000 LED's and they're pretty sick.
j

Thanks for the suggestions StrangeRanger.

I'll check them out.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

1982 GOOSENECK 24FT TRAILER (A52472)
1982 GOOSENECK...
New Wolverine72 In Skid Steer Brush Cutter (A53002)
New Wolverine72 In...
RIDE AND DRIVE INFO (A50775)
RIDE AND DRIVE...
2014 Ford Taurus SE Sedan (A51694)
2014 Ford Taurus...
2019 FORD TRANSIT 350HD VAN (A52576)
2019 FORD TRANSIT...
JOHN DEERE HX14 LOT NUMBER 256 (A53084)
JOHN DEERE HX14...
 
Top