โApr-20-2015 07:59 AM
โMay-06-2015 09:33 AM
โMay-06-2015 08:55 AM
โApr-20-2015 06:46 PM
โApr-20-2015 06:34 PM
โApr-20-2015 05:08 PM
โApr-20-2015 05:04 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
Pardon me ๐
I was solely going by the fitment number. What I was driving at is essentially there are no drop-in replacement lamps with higher wattage. I am donating time and materials upgrading an ambulance that uses the 6054 lamps. At night the lighting is a death sentence at Code 3 operation. That thing needs 100-watt KC off-road lamps. Too great a burden for my meager resources. Asphalt tinted cattle and scrap iron engine blocks that tumble off of trucks can be a real bear at 80-mph.
โApr-20-2015 04:52 PM
โApr-20-2015 03:57 PM
โApr-20-2015 03:55 PM
landyacht318 wrote:
Sylvania's cheapest 6054 sealed beam is no upgrade. None of sylvania's sealed beams have a good beam pattern.
Start engine, turn on the headlamps, and put a DMM on the prongs of the bulb.
Compare to voltage at battery terminal for both high and low beam.
Find where the h4 connector grounds to the body/frame/fenderwell, and clean that ground.
Retest voltage drop.
โApr-20-2015 03:37 PM
โApr-20-2015 02:57 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
The rectangular 2-headlight bulbs are denoted as
6054
I looked for weeks and found a single replacement 6054 made in Italy for almost 180-dollars each. I would defintely check voltage at the headlights.
The old louvered Per Lux stainless steel lighta were hard to beat for legal low-bean use. Halogen low beam bulbs consume 45-watts.
A 30-watt LED needs a LARGE finned heatsink. A finned disc an inch thick and about the diameter of a tennis ball. A flat chip would be twice the area of a postage stamp. A COB would be needed but where are they going to stick the heatsink? I smell a rat. This does not add up.
FROM THE SCHOOL OF HARD KNOCKS
โApr-20-2015 02:54 PM
โApr-20-2015 02:20 PM
โApr-20-2015 02:00 PM
busyguy wrote:
My Harney coach has the sealed beam headlights. The high beam is great but, the low beam is almost worthless.
I am thinking about changing them to LED's and was wondering if anyone else has already did this. If so how did it work and was there much improvement.
Bulbs are $139.00 a pair on Amazon. Not cheap but may be worth it.
Thanks for your response
Busyguy