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HID fogs
Anyone running HID fogs in their E70?
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I don't think its a good idea to mount HID's in fogs as the constant on/off nature of the lights during turns will significantly shorten the life of the ballasts.
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Don't do it, since fogs are reflectors you will have too much glare and from the distance they would look brighter than your headlights.
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You wouldn't have that problem with an E53...fogs don't shut off for turns and I've got projectors ;) They work great in my case.
Honestly, ballasts are built so much better than they were years ago, so I'd go ahead and do it personally. If you've already got HID headlights, get a 3k (yellow like Lexus, but I've always liked that personally) or some in the 5k-6K (no more than that) HID kit from www.ddmtuning.com. Your stock HID's are around the 5k-5.5k range, so going higher than that will look stupid. DDM has a lifetime warranty, so in the end, who really cares how many ballasts you go through. |
Not all E53 come with projectors, I think 04+ use reflectors with H11 bulbs. Stock HIDs are 4300K, to match fogs with headlights - 5000K should be used since there is no projector cutoff discoloration present with reflectors.
DDM HID kits are pretty good but you still have to pay for the shipping if returned. Quote:
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I agree not all E53's come with projectors, but a majority of them do. I've only seen one without them. Who told you that you've got to ship them back? When DDM tuning parts fail, you do not have to return ship them at all. You take a picture of the damaged part when it fails, showing them that you either cut the outside lead on the bulb or the cord on the ballast and they ship another to you after you give them proof that you destroyed the item. They even let me change bulb colors when they sent me a replacement set.
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DDM told me to ship it to them because my bulb was bad. In your case, I can make tons of diffent pictures of the same bulb/ballast/wires and keep getting replacement, that sounds strange...
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The bulbs replacement was a simple picture of it cut at the top and bottom of the outside connection, the ballast required me telling them the serial numbers on the side as well as the cut cable. Honestly, the price of a replacement bulb is probably cheaper than shipping it back to them considering where you're at, so I don't know why they'd even ask you to do that.
I agree someone could photoshop the images, but that's what they had me do. The bulbs are cheaper than the ballasts anyways, so I'm guessing that's why they replace them so easily vs wanting specifics written on the ballast for quality control issues. Seeng that there are eBay HID kits for like $37 shipped, and knowing they're still making money at those prices, I'm guessing this is why DDM sells that and offers the lifetime warranty...even after a couple of replacements, they're still in the green. |
It seems like most who do this mod in an e53 or e70 blow bulbs like crazy and throw codes.
Also, are most people doing this mod for looks or for an actual lighting upgrade? I don't see how these high output HID's actually help you see better in fog and rain than the factory setup or yellow halogen bulbs. Plus those HID setups tend to glare like crazy and blind oncomming drivers. |
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It is not easy to get your fogs work properly. First of all you have to code your vehicle and shutdown bulb check for fogs. Another story is that your FRM module (ECU which controls also all lights in your vehicle) has some specific settings to limit the voltage on the fog bubls in order to save their long life). You can just install the relay and make many many wires, however you may just make some smart configuration and coding of your vehilce's FRM ECU and push it not to limit the voltage. Standard limit is set for 13.2 volts for the fogs. Once voltage reaches this limit your FRM starts to cut the voltage, thus your HID will start to strobe :D Many people expiriencing this problem with strobe HID after installation but not many exactly know where to fix it :thumbup: Regarding the temperature and power - 35W HID kit works perfect in fogs so far, temperature is OK also. |
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I did it for an upgrade since they are brighter, and since I've got projectors, the light still stays focused down to the ground, not over powering people like they probably would in the reflector style forglights. Generalize much? An improperly aimed anything can do that, you don't need HID's to blind people. As long as you're using HID's in a good projector setup, the light is actually more focused and less light is wasted vs using halogen. I now have a VERY distincy cutoff line that I didn't have before with halogens, as beforehand the light was more scattered all over the road...now it's directly in one place. If HID's are so bad, they wouldn't be used in so many cars...the difference is when used in aftermarket conversion in the wrong housing. I put a set in my non-projector headlights on the X and they were terrible. I've seen people even do it in regular non-projector headlights like my neighbors Toyota Tacoma, F350's, etc where it's a simple reflector headlight. For the most part, those aren't designed for HID's, so the headlight suddenly looks HUGE, is overly bright vs being focused, and is then blinding for other drivers. My bike doesn't have projectors, and while the light output is far brighter and better for me, I know I'm blinding on-coming and drivers in front of me...but in that situation, I don't care becase at least now they see me. |
I don't personally see many of these aftermarket HID's as an actually upgrade in adverse weather conditions. That is what the fogs are for afterall...for use in fog and rain. Brighter lights are not necessarily better in fog. Neither is a whiter or more blue light that matches your low beams. Yellow fog lights are the best in fog and rain due to the way the human eye interacts with different colors of light, so why would I want to match my fog with a bright white headlight? If you are more interested in the way your car looks or if you primarily use your fogs as driving lights, then that is another story.
I have read tons of threads on Bimmerforums about people getting codes, problems due to excess heat, etc. I know a few people here have run into those issues as well as others. |
I run 3000k fogs, so I've got the yellow foglights that you're talking about. It does help in two ways since it's brighter, the beam is more focused and it's yellow.
If they're getting codes, it's because they didn't get resistors with their HID kits. I've got HID's in all my cars and not one single code from any of them. I don't know how they'd get excessive heat since an HID bulb is a gas that react to an electrical charge from the ballast vs a halogen bulb that gets hots due to current actually running through a filament, making plenty of heat. Ever touched a hot halogen headlight bulb, or replaced a bulb in your house? HID's don't get hot like that, and since it sounds like you disapprove of HID's in general, I'm guessing you're speaking from hearsay more than experience. |
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Your opinion is biased because you do coding, and while I can as well, the resistors were free with purchase. Resistors are used everyday, from the computer your replying on now and in the TV you watch in the evening...there is nothing wrong with using them in the car either. When the time comes and I remove the resistors, it won't require me taking the time (or paying someone in your case) to flash back to stock.
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It hasn't been my experience, I've done HID upgrades for customers as well. What others due, their technique and/or corners cut is maybe their situation...I just know I've never had an issue in doing them for the past say 5yrs+ that I've been doing upgrades. My first set was in the 7, purchased through Apexcone about 5yrs ago. All my other sets have either been from hidextra.com or ddmtuning.com, but within the past few years, everything has been through DDM because of their lifetime warranty. The only major changes I've seen with HID's is that ballasts have gotten smaller, more reliable cold starting and their prices have come down considerably compared to when I got my first set. I've even done a H6054 to H4 headlight conversion (instead of replacing the whole headlight, it's now a modern replaceable bulb in the back) in my POS 90 S10 Blazer, and if the wiring in that old thing can handle it without issues for the past 1.5yrs, then I don't see why people are having issues in their newer BMW's. If done right, it's a win win as they also last longer than halogens on top of being brighter and more focused in the correct housing. I can't account for others experiences or installation procedures.
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Agree, most of newer HID ballasts from DDM or any Chinese supplier use digital controller which is much more reliable, runs at lower current (including start-up current) and has built-in safety features.
Generally, halogen bulb runs hotter than 35W/55W HID bulb but since HID bulbs are longer especially for H1s and H3s versions, HID bulb could be located closer to the plastic parts of fog light, which may start to melt. Sometimes HIDs start to flicker or flash because they consume less energy compared to halogen which freaks current controller in the car. This can be solved by installing resistors, relay, reprogramming or using 55W HID kit instead of 35W. 55W kit consumes about the same energy as halogen bulbs. Quote:
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E53 Info Projection housings Left - 63178409025 - up to 06/2001 production - H3 style bulb - $112.78 @ Tischer BMW Right - 63178409026 - up to 06/2001 production - H3 style bulb - $112.78 @ Tischer BMW Recommend 40 mil Lamin-x film (Product# B108) while ditching the reflective lenses and retrofitting the projectors Went with the HIDextra.com 35W H3 5K system based on James' review. Not using resistors. Haven't ran into poor visibility or overheating or flickering issues yet. FYI.... leaving the E70 section now..... ;) |
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Where do you see projectors (for fogs) on this one? Like I said 04+ E53 and 07+ E70 use reflectors with H11 bulbs.
http://photos.ecarlist.com/SF/fr/Qg/.../hb/ow_640.jpg Quote:
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I'm getting the HID strobel ike you mentioned. Is there an easy fix to it? I'm about to switch it to PIAA ION yellows b/c it gets pretty annoying Edwin |
Don't do it. Everyone warned a gal on another forum , the same way they are warning you here. She went ahead and did it. Now she has thousands of dollars worth of electrical to fix, and she fried all her wiring to the Fog light harness. I have seen similar things like this happen to many members on the E90 forums too. In the event that you could get them to work, you will be glaring everyone on the road. There is no cutoff to the HIDS in the foglight housing. It is not like your headlights. It will look ridiculous and like I said, you will be blinding drivers in front of you, as well as oncoming traffic. If you want to imprive their use, you can get 3000k Bulbs from Piaa or Nokya. Those will improve the function of the lights in fog.
DDM makes garbage products. How do I know ? I have about $250 worth of their junk that got trashed in my E92. They have a great little scam going with the "replacement warranty". They tell you to send in the defective components, and they send you back new bulbs/ballasts. Before you realize it, your shipping costs are starting to add up. They make money off the shipping that they are passing on to you. They have a warehouse full of junk that they sell here in San Diego. They have a bunch of dealers spread out on car forums, and they drop ship everything from here. Don't fall for their scam. Listen to the voices of reason here. We've already wasted our money, so you don't have to. |
life time warranty sounds great.wish i had known that before i ordered my JDM hids
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