The Wiped Cam
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I never seal headlights beyond whatever came from the factory. In fact, I add more ventilation to em. Below is a Spyder, Anzo project that has traveled to Florida and Canada within the past couple of weeks, and has never exhibited condensation issues. The attached pics were taken moments ago in snow and very very cold weather overall. Please note that it has a custom LED highbeam retrofit, which provides a tonne more ventilation than what came from the factory. Also, you will find that the unit has been spayed and neutered (ghetto DRL tubes disabled).
^^^yes, that is an 18k Lm highbeam. If you ever wonder where the sun goes during night time, these bulbs will answer your question.
The LED highbeam produces a good amount of heat that gets blasted on to the lens, and keeps the lens clear even during icy conditions.
^^lowbeam has a Philips halogen bulb in it, because I care about other drivers on the road. Also, below is a visual representation of what the lowbeam (1 projector representation only) looks like on the road. Note that the only good thing about the lowbeam projector is that it has a very very sharp cutoff with a perfectly horizontal orientation. Gone are old f'd up Anzo/Spyder cutoff lines. However, the hotspots in the beam pattern is somewhat annoying (refer below):
I know this post is a little off topic, but as soon as I saw the mention of these units in this thread, I thought why not share how I'm keeping them condensation free.
^^^yes, that is an 18k Lm highbeam. If you ever wonder where the sun goes during night time, these bulbs will answer your question.
The LED highbeam produces a good amount of heat that gets blasted on to the lens, and keeps the lens clear even during icy conditions.
^^lowbeam has a Philips halogen bulb in it, because I care about other drivers on the road. Also, below is a visual representation of what the lowbeam (1 projector representation only) looks like on the road. Note that the only good thing about the lowbeam projector is that it has a very very sharp cutoff with a perfectly horizontal orientation. Gone are old f'd up Anzo/Spyder cutoff lines. However, the hotspots in the beam pattern is somewhat annoying (refer below):
I know this post is a little off topic, but as soon as I saw the mention of these units in this thread, I thought why not share how I'm keeping them condensation free.