nvm i worked it out! just had to yank it out with a lil more force lol..
bought phillips bluevision today...hope theyre good! $60 from autobarn..
definitely whiter than stock when i compared it with puttin in one side first..
Printable View
nvm i worked it out! just had to yank it out with a lil more force lol..
bought phillips bluevision today...hope theyre good! $60 from autobarn..
definitely whiter than stock when i compared it with puttin in one side first..
^^their whiter but by no means bright. Its because the blue coat removes light from all other spectrums which is why most of them come in a higher wattage to compensate. look at neo_phase's post#10 above.
their a waste of money and unsafe... you'll realise the unsafe part at night when the roads are wet... you won't see shit
Got the Calibre Xenon Blue bulbs from Super Cheap a few weeks back.
They're definately much brighter than OEM and can't really go wrong with $31. A good choice if you don't need anything fancy (blue/pure whiteness) and unwanted attention. See the review below to give you an idea of colour.
Going to buy another pair for the foggies just to use in the rain.
You'll probably find that those calibre bulbs are made by one of the same companies that more well known company buy off like Brown & Watson i.e. Narva, and just repackaged and sold cheaper. Nothing wrong with that if it means savings by us though.
i could get cheap hid kits if you want? xenon brand, brand new too :)
always the case with non-HID attempts at having clean white light. Bluetint is bad, and you'll suffer in the rain.
IMO save up, get a decent brand of HID's (or at least a good brand of bulbs), and aim ur headlights down enough so that you can still see without being significantly glarey - i don't know what BB6's are like with glare control, but yeah, HID's all the way if you want white.
or just stick to 'slightly whiter than OEM'