>>28570923 (OP)
That picture explains the exact problem, I CANNOT see when a car equipped with them is in the oncoming lane. Make them high-beam only and we're set.
>>28570923 (OP)
LED's are often improperly installed or pointed too upwards so they cause blinding for other drivers. Good quality halogens 12 voltage 55watt and 65Watt(high beam) are bright enough even for 140mph+ speeds at night time unless there's a bad design or faulty headlight wire harness with huge voltage loss from battery to headlights, alternatively corroded connections, dirty or hazy, moisture in projectors.
>>28571252
I have halogens and something's wrong with them, but I'm pretty sure it has to do with the alignment. I crank them all the way up their highest angle and I can still barely see, as in the beam only reaches like half of the distance I'd expect. what's weird is the high beams still seem properly aligned. when I turn them on all the street signs light up with their retroreflectivity. they've been this way for years and I've given up trying to figure them out.
>>28572070
Have you changed the bulbs?
Pic related was sent in as an alignment problem and it was a bulb problem.
Will also say 100% of aftermarket led bulbs in reflectors just had a blob of light, no pattern at all, I should have taken a picture while I worked there.
>>28572973
I replaced them with OEM halogen bulbs a couple years ago and saw no change. the cutoff is super low, to the point where it feels dangerous to drive at night. the adjusting screw only goes so far, at the maximum adjustment it's still too low to be useful at speed.
>>28571252 >LED's are often improperly installed or pointed too upwards so they cause blinding for other drivers
But won't undulations in the road still blind people?