
As i do a lot of country driving, i'm a big fan of lighting the roads ahead of me. My other car (nissan pathfinder fourby) has decent headlights and great driving light/spotties which i've fitted 50w HID's and light up the road for over a km ahead comfortably.
Coming back to the mx, and its reduced height compared to the fourby, the globe light brightness and thats partially due to the angle that it hits the road being reduced. So, i've done a few experiments with various globe assemblies (crystal headlights, the crystal "projector" headlights, and the oem ones).
In a nutshell, the crystal ones are rubbish (unless someone can point out a good brand and web site for it). The crystal projector headlights are also rubbish.
Rubbish as there is no defined cutoff on lowbeam output, and essentially is "highbeam" even on the low beam setting due to its undefined light scattering.
I've returned back to the oem glass, having not even taken my mx on the road at night with the other setups as i'd be ashamed of myself blinding others.
Below is a very direct comparison between standard globes (not quite standard but the phillips "blue" light ones and oem headlights, vs crystal headlights, vs oem glass + HIDs.)
Hope you might find this useful if you where thinking about the conversion. I've adjusted the HID's lower by 10cm at 10metres distance to reduce the actual glass glare onto coming traffic. Light output is significant.
The HID's are 35w output, and their ballasts have been secured beneath each of the light assemblies and cable tied out of the popup mechanism's way. I'll get more photos of that setup if anyone's interested tomorrow in daylight.
