Date: Mon, 5 Nov 2007 13:40:55 -0800
Reply-To: David Marshall <mailinglist@FASTFORWARD.CA>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: David Marshall <mailinglist@FASTFORWARD.CA>
Subject: GoWesty's headlight upgrade kit
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
I wonder how much of a difference these really make to the overall
light
output. It seems to me that you are still using the 15+ year
old
small gauge wiring and that the only thing that you are really
doing is
by-passing the high currently going through the headlight
switch thus
saving it and installing brighter bulbs to get more light
output.
It would be interesting to get a back to back
comparison of actual
voltage at the headlight before and after
installing the relays - I would
suspect there won't be much of a
difference due to V=IR losses. In
other words the more currently you
put through a wire the more voltage
loss you get - these old wires
will have a lot more resistance than new
ones.
Assuming
20A of current through 2m of wire:
14 gauge (new) = 0.33 v drop
Adding some corrosion in
there would double or triple the
resistance easily resulting in a 0.7 v or
so drop
http://www.stealth316.com/2-wire-resistance.htm
explains a lot
about this
What I have done is get some 8ga wire
and went
from the battery direct to behind the grille (install a fuse fuse
at
the battery!) then I installed some water proof 30A relays behind the
grille one for low beam, one for high beam and one for my rallye
lights. I used the original headlight connectors to trigger the
relays and have new 12ga wiring to new terminal housings that plug
into
the back of the light.
Now when I turn on the lights
there is
almost no voltage drop between the battery and the lights
and the lights
are much brighter again - no current through my
headlight switch or
ignition switch - factory wiring is 100% uncut
and can be turned back to
original.
Using the above
formulas and averaging at 10 gauge
(most of the wire is 8ga - 30cm is
12ga) would result in a 0.1 v
drop.
When you have only
13.4V to play with - every
little counts!
David
Marshall
http://www.hasenwerk.ca
http://www.fastforward.ca
Box
4153, Quesnel BC, Canada
V2J 3J2
On Mon, November 5, 2007
10:01, Stephen Grisanti
wrote:
> We ordered one of these on
special last month and
> Sunday was the day to install it.
We’re leaving for
a
> week in the Smokies soon and with the
recent time
> change better lighting in the mountains will be
most
>
welcome. You can see captioned pix of the job at:
>
> http://picasaweb.google.com/bike2vcu/HeadlightUpgrade
>
>
> It took about 90 minutes from start to finish.
The
> biggest change seems to be in the low beam. When the
> lights are on you can actually see the light cast on
>
the
pavement in front of you. It’s not real cheap but
>
improved night vision will be well worth it, and the
>
circuitry
upgrade to relays will help ease my mind
> about
melting the light
switch.
>
> Stephen