
rather than shoot the beam further down the road I might be able to get a better look what is lurking off the edge - like a rouge camel!....

Moderators: timk, Stu, -alex, miata, zombie, Andrew
Good idea. I drove past a Pug 405 and the dead buck roo that it had hit just near my place yesterday. Front smashed in, bonnet crushed around the motor, most of the windscreen dríven into the cabin and the roof crushed to half height over the passenger seat. That was only an eastern grey; western reds and greys are much bigger.billybunter wrote:yep! i am getting ready to do a bit of a long inland run plus I'm also a bit pushed for grille space. I might try the bulb upgrade first and see how that goes.
I don't expect to do any night driving as its not advised in central aust but it's better to be prepared just in case.
davekmoore wrote:Might be good to check design regs if you plan to use lights so low down as anything other than fog lights, especially if there's no fog.
n height:
Minimum: Not less than 250mm above the ground.
In height: no individual specifications.
Actually for me their main purpose is for driving mountain roads with hairpins and switchbacks. The side lighting of fogs lets you see around to the exit of the corner which is blackness otherwise. I used to do these ascents and descents with the hazards flashng to help me see to the side.Mr Morlock wrote:Fog lights are just about useless and their single purpose is fog. For normal driving they don't do anything because the shallow illumination is completely offset by normal speeds. A driving lamp is designed to throw a beam well beyond a high beam therefore you see further. But you cannot use them and dazzle oncoming traffic. I have had driving lights and had not used for years. Today's cars rarely need anything more than a high beam.
Return to “MX5 Audio, Electronics & Lighting”
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 6 guests