Are we OK with how bright headlights are getting?

   / Are we OK with how bright headlights are getting? #101  
Our 2020 Subaru Outback is probably the WORST car I've ever driven at night in a snowstorm due to its lighting! Drive-wise, it's a beast in snow. ZERO issues. Lighting-wise, it's horrible!!!

The daytime running lights are around the headlights.

View attachment 4375538

They shine in all directions, even UP! So if you're driving into snow, with your low beams on, these DTRLs shine UP and illuminate all of the falling snow right about eye height. Even if you turn off the headlights, the DTRLs are still on, and make it hard to see in falling snow.

Another thing is as you travel along in falling snow, the headlights get dimmer, as the snow and ice stick to the headlights and don't melt off as with old high wattage bulbs. The LED headlights generate little heat.

So about every 30 minutes you have to stop and clear the headlights.

BAAAAHHH!!!!!

Rant over. :p

I'm going to see if there's a fuse for just the DTRLs. If there is, I'm going to make them switchable. If not, I'm considering duct tape over them. 🤣
If it were me, I would definitely wire the switch in. Headlights that light upward in snow drive me bananas.

Actually any form of poor headlight illumination annoys me. I owned one vehicle that had an extremely sharp left edge and vertical cutoff, to the point where I couldn't really see beyond the bright edge. Between deer and pedestrians dressed in black, I found it nerve wracking, but poor headlights and poor alignment have always been a sore point for me. I bought a headlight alignment tool before I got my first license.🙄😆

I have to admit to buying fog lights for many of our vehicles, not because fog is that common here, but because when we do have fog, seeing the road, and the road edge, really, really matters; we have more than a few lethal drops, with no guardrails on our prime access road. A pair of fog lights might really help you out. There are also aftermarket headlight defrosters, but I have never used them;

All the best,

Peter
 
   / Are we OK with how bright headlights are getting? #102  
If it were me, I would definitely wire the switch in. Headlights that light upward in snow drive me bananas.

Actually any form of poor headlight illumination annoys me. I owned one vehicle that had an extremely sharp left edge and vertical cutoff, to the point where I couldn't really see beyond the bright edge. Between deer and pedestrians dressed in black, I found it nerve wracking, but poor headlights and poor alignment have always been a sore point for me. I bought a headlight alignment tool before I got my first license.🙄😆

I have to admit to buying fog lights for many of our vehicles, not because fog is that common here, but because when we do have fog, seeing the road, and the road edge, really, really matters; we have more than a few lethal drops, with no guardrails on our prime access road. A pair of fog lights might really help you out. There are also aftermarket headlight defrosters, but I have never used them;

All the best,

Peter
We have fog lights. However, even if I turn the headlights off and try to drive with just the fog lights, the DTRLs stay on. That's how I found out what was blinding me... I turned off the fogs and the headlights and STILL got blinded. GRRRRR!!!! 🤣
 
   / Are we OK with how bright headlights are getting? #103  
Many years back I put an HID bulb in my motorcycle and was lucky that it maintained the sharp cut-off. The extra light was amazing (especially being able to spot certain reflector material from half a mile or more away 😉). A few years later, my F350's lights were half-filled with water and the front of the housings yellowing badly; I swapped to clear housings and LEDs and no longer get tired driving at night. Though the truck is up a ways (not specifically lifted, but bigger tires and 4x4 does raise things) I never get flashed. I do drop to parking lights if I pull up behind someone at an intersection because good cut-off or no if the lights are above the trunk someone's going to get blinded.

More recently I put LEDs in my wife's highlander. It's got projector lenses for the low beams and zero issues with the light pattern there but probably twice as bright. The amazing thing is I'm finding is that the oncoming car headlights no longer make my eyes hurt - I think with the old dim bulbs behind lenses you really don't put out a lot of light, and here it's pretty dark so your eyes are probably wide open (the iris/pupil I mean) so when bright lights come at you there's a big shock as your iris slams shut. With brighter lights coming from our own car now, bright lights coming at me I don't have the same feeling.

With that success I put LEDs in my son's older Mazda; it also has lenses so there's little worry about light pattern.

My suggestion to anyone with hurting eyes at night, join the arms race - not only will you see better but you won't perceive other lights as being so bright any more.
 
   / Are we OK with how bright headlights are getting? #104  
Cut off is a big deal with HID and LED headlights. I’ve got two vehicles that have hid’s. When going down a hill you really notice it when the lights are shining on the up hill pavement. One problem is when cresting a hill or going around a curve, your headlights are often blinding oncoming traffic even if aimed correctly. It’s just the geometry of where they shine.
 
   / Are we OK with how bright headlights are getting? #105  
They shine in all directions, even UP! So if you're driving into snow, with your low beams on, these DTRLs shine UP and illuminate all of the falling snow right about eye height. Even if you turn off the headlights, the DTRLs are still on, and make it hard to see in falling snow.

Another thing is as you travel along in falling snow, the headlights get dimmer, as the snow and ice stick to the headlights and don't melt off as with old high wattage bulbs. The LED headlights generate little heat.

So about every 30 minutes you have to stop and clear the headlights.
The DRLs stay on even with headlights on? On my Acadia they turn off. I'd be in there with a pair of wire cutters if that were my car. :confused:

As far as LEDs and snow, yeah, had the same experience. I'd replaced the halogens in the Acadia with LEDs, last Thanksgiving got caught in a snowstorm (wet, early-season stuff) and had to pull off every 15 miles or so too. What sucked was that a bunch of the cars I'd passed on the interstate (this car is awesome in snow) went by while I was cleaning headlights. :( Learned to make my clean-off stops quick. :ROFLMAO:
Dryer snow later in the season wasn't a problem. I wonder how they deal with that on newer vehicles with factory LEDs?
 
   / Are we OK with how bright headlights are getting? #106  
The DRLs stay on even with headlights on? On my Acadia they turn off. I'd be in there with a pair of wire cutters if that were my car. :confused:

As far as LEDs and snow, yeah, had the same experience. I'd replaced the halogens in the Acadia with LEDs, last Thanksgiving got caught in a snowstorm (wet, early-season stuff) and had to pull off every 15 miles or so too. What sucked was that a bunch of the cars I'd passed on the interstate (this car is awesome in snow) went by while I was cleaning headlights. :( Learned to make my clean-off stops quick. :ROFLMAO:
Dryer snow later in the season wasn't a problem. I wonder how they deal with that on newer vehicles with factory LEDs?
Yep, they are the C-shaped light rings around the outside of the headlights. In earlier models, they were the high beams on lower setting.

I think I found a way to disable them. It appears there is a 5 pin relay for the right and left ones. People have mentioned you can replace the 5 pin relay with a 4 pin relay and that'll kill the C lights.

I'll try that first, then if it works, figure out a way to wire them to a switch as the only time I want them off is when the snow is falling.
 
   / Are we OK with how bright headlights are getting? #107  
Can I suggest considering the use of a relay with a momentary pushbutton control, so that the DRL will automatically revert to "normal" function when you turn the vehicle off?

All the best,

Peter
 
   / Are we OK with how bright headlights are getting? #108  
I noticed something about DRLs a few years back when I was driving in the (CA) South Bay on a freeway - it was dark - definitely night - and there were a number of cars quite obviously driving "lights out" but with DRLs, and I've seen this a number of times since - though only on well-lit highways.

I suspect that the driver sees that some light is coming from their car, and there are enough street lights that they see well enough, though people coming up behind them don't see them so well... this is my suspicion based on the fact that of all the cars I saw driving without lights turned on (ie, no taillights at all) all had DRLs (which in older cars means low beams on lower than normal setting).
 
   / Are we OK with how bright headlights are getting? #109  
I noticed something about DRLs a few years back when I was driving in the (CA) South Bay on a freeway - it was dark - definitely night - and there were a number of cars quite obviously driving "lights out" but with DRLs, and I've seen this a number of times since - though only on well-lit highways.

I suspect that the driver sees that some light is coming from their car, and there are enough street lights that they see well enough, though people coming up behind them don't see them so well... this is my suspicion based on the fact that of all the cars I saw driving without lights turned on (ie, no taillights at all) all had DRLs (which in older cars means low beams on lower than normal setting).
Sadly, that isn't uncommon in the Bay Area. Whatever the cause, in my view they have clearly demonstrated themselves to be incapacitated in some way, so I try to give them a wide berth.

Then there are the kids doing 40+mph down the road on our nearby hill, at night, wearing all black, no helmet, with no lights or reflectors. I only saw one kid by the faint iridescence from some logo on their shirt. I think it got popular after some "influencer" posted a video of it. Mercifully, it seems to be dying down, but I don't know if it is Darwin or something else.

All the best,

Peter
 
   / Are we OK with how bright headlights are getting? #110  
I noticed something about DRLs a few years back when I was driving in the (CA) South Bay on a freeway - it was dark - definitely night - and there were a number of cars quite obviously driving "lights out" but with DRLs, and I've seen this a number of times since - though only on well-lit highways.

I suspect that the driver sees that some light is coming from their car, and there are enough street lights that they see well enough, though people coming up behind them don't see them so well... this is my suspicion based on the fact that of all the cars I saw driving without lights turned on (ie, no taillights at all) all had DRLs (which in older cars means low beams on lower than normal setting).
A lot of people don't seem to care if you can't see them. I'vd even heard claims tjat turning on your headlights uses more gas.
That may even be true but I know the biggest variable to my economy is my right foot.
 

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