Above Forum Ad

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

H7 HID KIT - Brand NEW!

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • NSW H7 HID KIT - Brand NEW!

    Ive got a set of H7 HID KITS i no longer need, i originally bought them as a spare set.

    It is a complete kit, nothing else required, and no modifications needed.

    This set does not give off any warnings on your on-board computer

    6000K - Nice bright white colour
    Brand new in the box

    Ive got the exact same set in my polo gti if you need to know what it will look like.

    Price: $140 (Posted)
    Location: Wetherill Park (NSW) for people wanting to pick up

    Pics:
    Last edited by BRU51N; 14-05-2010, 06:28 PM.

  • #2
    Mate can you fit these to a Mk 3 VR? Im not sure whats involved in installing them thats all.
    Coxy
    "Some people dream of achieving greatness, other people get out of bed and do it"

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Coxy09 View Post
      Mate can you fit these to a Mk 3 VR? Im not sure whats involved in installing them thats all.
      pretty sue that the stock mk3 dual headlights use H3 bulbs, so no these H7 HID's will not fit.
      \( O ) o\====(\X/)=TDI=/o ( O )/ 2011 Jetta Mk5 125TDI - Squidly

      ((o)(O))====(\X/)=TDI=((O)(o)) 1996 Golf Mk3 TDI - Squid

      Comment


      • #4
        these will only fit bulb housings of h7, so check your owners manual if your unsure.

        installation would be the same matter as changing any headlight bulb

        Comment


        • #5
          im not sure what bulb housing a mk1 golf got, but would these fit on a mk1?

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by BRU51N View Post
            these will only fit bulb housings of h7, so check your owners manual if your unsure.

            installation would be the same matter as changing any headlight bulb
            HIDs by definition use a completely different bulb type (gas discharge vs filament), which requires very high voltages in order to produce the arc that actually produces the light. In order to do this, they utilise an electrical device most commonly called a ballast, which takes the ~12V power feed your car's electrical system provides and provides an output pulse of up to 20kV (yes, 20,000V) to light the bulbs, and around 80-90V once the bulbs are running.

            Do these have built-in ballasts, or are they actually HID "effect" bulbs (basically being a high output filament bulb with a blue tinge to the light output so they look like HIDs)?
            Last edited by Manaz; 28-05-2010, 11:22 PM.
            Nothing to see here...

            Comment


            • #7
              Would you take $100

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Manaz View Post
                HIDs by definition use a completely different bulb type (gas discharge vs filament), which requires very high voltages in order to produce the arc that actually produces the light. In order to do this, they utilise an electrical device most commonly called a ballast, which takes the ~12V power feed your car's electrical system provides and provides an output pulse of up to 20kV (yes, 20,000V) to light the bulbs, and around 80-90V once the bulbs are running.

                Do these have built-in ballasts, or are they actually HID "effect" bulbs (basically being a high output filament bulb with a blue tinge to the light output so they look like HIDs)?

                ballast and everything included.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by georgep View Post
                  Would you take $100
                  pm sent mate

                  Comment

                  Working...
                  X