Old car headlights were all the same - which was a fairly bright idea

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  • Опубликовано: 15 окт 2022
  • There will be highs, there will be lows, but they would always be the same. Until 1957 anyway.
    Links 'n' stuff:
    The video on turn signal sync (if you're into that sorta thing)
    • Why it's not possible ...
    And the video on red turn signals and why they're silly
    • The Senseless Ambiguit...
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Комментарии • 8 тыс.

  • @JETZcorp
    @JETZcorp Год назад +8101

    According to my dad, who is old, in the 1970s if you drove around with the high beams on or your lights misadjusted, the police would hunt you down like a rabid dog. Today, it seems that you can strap the sun itself to the front of your car and never get bothered. Funny how things change.

    • @anne-droid7739
      @anne-droid7739 Год назад +904

      Lol. Your Dad is right. There are plenty of us who have spent quite a bit of breath cursing the fact that, while we were not permitted to blind old people at night while we blasted "Bang a Gong" at them, we are now, as old people, permitted to be blinded, as we quietly hum along with "Bang a Gong" with the windows rolled up. *Sigh* We sacrificed so much for you durn kids....

    • @animefreak5757
      @animefreak5757 Год назад +385

      while i fully agree with you (damn those illegal HID kits nobody seems to stop) I eventually caved to the old maxim "if you can't beat em, join em". The irony to me is that with brighter lights up close, distance vision was actually worse (kinda like how having a interior light on at night nukes your vision, it's the same thing really, just not as pronounced)
      I'm not that old, but my vision has always been sharp, and excessively bright lights literally give me a headache.
      Despite having asked cops if they ever actually stop these guys (to which they answered, yes they do) Year's have rolled by and i've never been questioned about it.
      Now of course, they've moved on from HID retrofits and onto lightbars...I feel like at some point the cops are going to HAVE to step in as this brightness war escalates.

    • @jr2904
      @jr2904 Год назад +344

      @@anne-droid7739 I'm only 33 myself, but when I went through driver's Ed we were taught not to turn on our brights when we are within 500 ft of another vehicle. I get blinded by the super bright LEDs and others who just don't give af these days. I flash my lights, but nothing but a middle finger is the usual response.

    • @PhirePhlame
      @PhirePhlame Год назад +635

      @@jr2904 It gets worse: I've had experiences where I'd flash my brights at someone who was blinding me, and they'd flash _their_ brights back at me, because apparently those miniature suns were their fucking low beams! How?

    • @awo1fman
      @awo1fman Год назад +136

      Also, turn signals that are white or purple or any color under the sun other than the proper amber or red. Never used to be tolerated, now never enforced. Same for tinted windows and "smoked" light covers. The other day I was behind a Mazda and was cussing them for not using their indicators - then when I got really close I saw they actually *were* using their indicators but it was impossible to tell unless you were right up close and looking DIRECTLY at the indicator. It had blacked-out taillight covers...
      Meanwhile, I have a motorcycle with a weak electrical system and I wanted to replace all the incandescent bulbs with LEDs in order to minimize the power draw. The headlights weren't a problem, and they are the biggest draw by far, but I can't find any motorcycle indicators that are worth a flip. They are all dangerously dim, even the really expensive ones. I found some LED replacement bulbs that are plenty bright and fit the OEM sockets, but the bulb part is too big to physically fit behind the factory lens, so they won't work. All this after looking long and hard and going through several flashers before finding one that would work with the bike and not force me to use load resistors with the LEDs, thereby completely cancelling the whole reason for going LED.
      AARGH!

  • @GeneCash
    @GeneCash Год назад +4309

    It was funny, because at first I hated the mandated inflexibility of these things, and I wrote a big rant about it. Then I had lunch and thought about it, and realized it's *a* *lot* *better* than the $750 light assemblies with cheap-ass plastic lenses.

    • @FirstDagger
      @FirstDagger Год назад +431

      Standardization is great if done right and if it allows implementation of technological advances.

    • @macdaddykwm1
      @macdaddykwm1 Год назад +124

      And they only cost $3.00

    • @brianwelch1579
      @brianwelch1579 Год назад +178

      750 is CHEAP. Some of the late model lights are over $5000 each.

    • @jake0068
      @jake0068 Год назад +121

      @@brianwelch1579 tell me you drive new “truck” with out telling me you drive a “truck”

    • @__-fm5qv
      @__-fm5qv Год назад +99

      @@jake0068 Oh modern cars can get that expensive too don't you worry! Thanks to all the fancy daytime running lights and LED arrays and such.

  • @autarken
    @autarken Год назад +528

    after living in Germany for 2 years and returning to the US for the first time, the difference between headlight glare was *drastic*. driving in the US felt much more dangerous as it's very difficult to see at night with all the glare from other vehicles.

    • @thomgizziz
      @thomgizziz Год назад +79

      There used to be rules on how bright lights could be but that got thrown out because people are selfish morons.

    • @daszieher
      @daszieher Год назад +25

      Some of our EU neighbors pump their headlights with Chinese LED "bulbs" made to fit the sockets.
      These things throw the optical parameters way off kilter sending light in all directions. It even blinds you off to the side but doesn't light the road ahead properly.

    • @Robkellysound
      @Robkellysound Год назад +8

      @@daszieher That's extremely rare nowadays. I can't remember the last time I saw a car with those. Maybe six months.

    • @daszieher
      @daszieher Год назад +5

      @@Robkellysound which side of the Brexit divide are you on? 😃

    • @rolfathan
      @rolfathan Год назад

      @@thomgizziz the manufacturers are making them insane now too.

  • @k4gap
    @k4gap Год назад +471

    I worked at the plant that made these headlights. The metal that you referred to as the reflector inside the headlight, was not a piece of metal, it was a coating of aluminum applied directly onto the glass.

    • @beastmastreakaninjadar6941
      @beastmastreakaninjadar6941 11 месяцев назад +12

      That wasn't always the case, though.

    • @jacobakers8041
      @jacobakers8041 8 месяцев назад +39

      Are we saying aluminum is not metal now?

    • @mikecurry6847
      @mikecurry6847 8 месяцев назад +19

      He literally says this at about 6 minutes in. He talks about how the metal being totally cut off from outside air will prevent it from oxidizing. He called it a "glass envelope."

    • @baneverything5580
      @baneverything5580 5 месяцев назад +6

      Aluminum is metal.

    • @roots4x
      @roots4x 4 месяца назад +7

      It is a piece of metal. Just a very thin one.

  • @keithyinger3326
    @keithyinger3326 Год назад +899

    Imagine halogen being "too bright" and nowadays we have blinding HID and LED lights. I'm seriously been behind some cars and the flashing orange turn signal is like a strobe light. They are ridiculously bright. Light turns green, the cars pull away, and I'm still seeing spots from that turn signal. You know it's bad when you have to put your hand up to block people's brake lights and turn signals because they're so ridiculously bright.

    • @thewolfin
      @thewolfin Год назад +101

      In winter (it usually begins after DST "fall back") I have to drive with my sun visor blocking the entire oncoming lane of traffic. I guess I suffer from night blindness, but it seems like it's gotten exponentially worse as more people buy new LED-headlight cars. I read something about them not bothering to adjust the beam angle at the factory and just putting a note in the owners' manual... which nobody reads.
      Been told on Reddit that I shouldn't be driving, that it's a disability and I'm putting people at risk, and that I should be riding the bus. But I'd be fine if nobody had those ridiculous headlights.

    • @qdllc
      @qdllc Год назад +22

      As a counterpoint…particularly with a motorcycle, brighter is better because somehow, people still manage to not see you.

    • @user-ellievator
      @user-ellievator Год назад +123

      @@qdllc As a counterpoint to your counterpoint, there is a limit. If people aren't noticing you, having brighter lights isn't going to fix that. In fact, brighter is _much_ worse for safety because for the driver with the brighter lights, their eyes have adjusted to that brightness, and anything outside of the beam of light will appear much 'darker'. For the other drivers, night vision gets reduced significantly to where all you can see at times is very brighr white or total darkness.
      In other words, brighter lights increase the contrast between light and dark and this causes some of the areas that used to be visible to now just look like a damn black hole.

    • @cadpanacea
      @cadpanacea Год назад +36

      Those damn Ford Super Duty trucks (which every other person is in hock over) have the brightest lights on the planet.

    • @MacIn173
      @MacIn173 Год назад +22

      Interestingly enough, some classic cars from 70s used to have "dimmer" block that would make turn and brake signals dimmer when the headlights are on.

  • @DeviantOllam
    @DeviantOllam Год назад +960

    I am so thrilled to learn about something that I have literally wondered about since I bought my first Jeep CJ... probably even longer in the past, if I could remember far enough back. :-D (also the note about right-hand drive and headlight patterns was fascinating!)

    • @BenWolkWeiss
      @BenWolkWeiss Год назад +11

      Agreed! I've owned a bunch of Subarus and thought about some of the cooler JDM headlights available along with wanting a Skyline or other JDM only car. I never thought about the headlight issue either. Just the steering wheel and the shifter being on the wrong side.

    • @RobWenzel84
      @RobWenzel84 Год назад +4

      @@BenWolkWeiss I also grew up with many many Subarus, there my favorite

    • @steveg5122
      @steveg5122 Год назад +7

      you can even replace sealed beams with a european pattern, less glare and more light down the road.

    • @SeanBZA
      @SeanBZA Год назад +6

      @@steveg5122 You also get a drop in retrofit that changes the sealed beam to accept a H3 halogen capsule, giving you a replaceable lamp and a glass envelope, though you do run into issues of it no longer being totally sealed. Does however allow you to go to the 65W plus lamps with no problems.

    • @jandorniak6473
      @jandorniak6473 Год назад +34

      Deviant Ollam learns something new.
      > Is this a new vulnerability?

  • @jonathonrossebo1783
    @jonathonrossebo1783 Год назад +273

    I never saw anything wrong with sealed beam headlights myself. They worked perfectly fine and are far cheaper to replace than other headlight designs. Since they were made of glass they didn't get cloudy over time like the plastic headlights did. Automakers should have never phased them out entirely.

    • @exoticcar5482
      @exoticcar5482 Год назад +43

      Tbf though even if sealed beam headlights were still standard today let's be real they would phase out that glass and switch to crap plastic anyway

    • @jonathonrossebo1783
      @jonathonrossebo1783 Год назад +15

      @@exoticcar5482 unless they use an existing manufacturer that makes them out of glass to supply them. Like Sylvania, General Electric, or Philips. Even so, the customer that buys such vehicles can always switch out the cheap plastic sealed beam headlights in favor of some good aftermarket glass ones. They're still going to be 50-state DOT legal. There are plenty of aftermarket manufacturers out there that make parts that are much better than stock.

    • @windhelmguard5295
      @windhelmguard5295 Год назад +28

      also most components of a sealed beam headlight can be infinitely recycled, as they're mostly just plain metal and glass, almost no plastic waste to speak off.

    • @jasoneldridge4738
      @jasoneldridge4738 Год назад +3

      Apart from the fact they were about as bright as a candle !

    • @paulwooton4390
      @paulwooton4390 Год назад +29

      Funny when the headlights were all the same you could easily tell one make/model from another, now the headlights are different, but the cars all look about the same.

  • @henryj.8528
    @henryj.8528 Год назад +549

    Before cars had electric lights, the earliest ones had small oil lamps. Those weren't very bright and soon gave way to acetylene which burns with a very bright flame. Acetylene is difficult to compress (tends to explode) but a way was found to dissolve acetylene in acetone (like CO2 is dissolved in a soda). Acetylene is still used in welding and is available in two cylinder sizes. The "MC" cylinder is quite small. The "B" cylinder is much larger. These names come from the fact that the cylinders were originally designed for automotive illumination. The small "MC" cylinder was for motor cars while the larger "B" type was for buses.

    • @unpairedelectron2886
      @unpairedelectron2886 Год назад +40

      Wow I just love little facts like that, thank you!=

    • @henryj.8528
      @henryj.8528 Год назад +21

      @@crispindry2815 My Grammarly subscription has run out apparently...

    • @randacnam7321
      @randacnam7321 Год назад +41

      And some cars used calcium carbide acetylene generators instead of tanks.

    • @henryj.8528
      @henryj.8528 Год назад +4

      @@randacnam7321 True.

    • @bcubed72
      @bcubed72 Год назад +38

      For carbide lamps, the acetylene was made _in situ_ by dripping water over calcium carbide. Hence the name, "carbide lamps."

  • @GeneralChangOfDanang
    @GeneralChangOfDanang Год назад +569

    There's a guy in a truck with insanely bright headlights that I pass every night on the way home from work. The first time I saw him, I flashed my high beams to let him know his were on. I guess he thought he was going to be a smartass and turn his high beams on and they were EXACTLY the same brightness as his regular lights.

    • @mendonesiac
      @mendonesiac Год назад +111

      In my area lots of trucks are lifted and nobody ever adjusts their lights to make sure they aren't blinding oncoming traffic.

    • @silentvoiceinthedark5665
      @silentvoiceinthedark5665 Год назад +28

      You need to get a light bar and connect it to your high beams via relay

    • @squidiz496
      @squidiz496 Год назад +52

      @@mendonesiac My friend and i did some tests with his stock brand new nissan pickup. With the high beams off his stock LEDs where enough to blind me when I passed him on a flat road and if I didn't know any better I would have though his high beams where on.

    • @mendonesiac
      @mendonesiac Год назад +101

      @@squidiz496 It has gotten ridiculous. I drive a '98 pickup and when a newer vehicle tailgates me at night there's a shadow in front of me and the road is lit up on both sides, completely overpowering my lights. It's really distracting.

    • @myselfalex
      @myselfalex Год назад +13

      If they ever crash or cause you to somehow, just remember they're always 100% at fault for illegally modified vehicles.

  • @blitzroehre1807
    @blitzroehre1807 Год назад +234

    Your Figaro has H4 bulb in the headlights, and if you nip off the 3 locating lugs in the base you can slightly rotate the bulb to suit righthand traffic, the low beam filament is partly blocked by a trough and rotating it will block out the part of the beam which blinds oncoming traffic. Of course some of the optics are also molded into the glass, but this trick should suit you just fine...

  • @TC1Z2L3
    @TC1Z2L3 18 дней назад +4

    I had an pretty rare old Corolla Sport GT-S with pop-up headlights. Everything was OEM, JDM or custom but the headlights came right off the shelf at Pep Boys and they fit like a glove. I'm still blown away.

  • @TimeBucks
    @TimeBucks Год назад +396

    I like this idea

  • @thezouave7636
    @thezouave7636 Год назад +507

    I actually find it very difficult to drive at night now without polarized sunglasses because there are so many cars with lights that are way too bright.

    • @wyattswiggum965
      @wyattswiggum965 Год назад +17

      I agree

    • @Kana0211
      @Kana0211 Год назад +47

      Especially trucks. Damn American ones

    • @notmyname5449
      @notmyname5449 Год назад +61

      Even worse as a cyclist. The adaptive high beams just ignore and blind you.

    • @tezzanoia
      @tezzanoia Год назад +42

      When in a car at night (as a passenger, I don't drive), even closing my eyes isn't enough with some cars. I'm autistic and have sensory issues because of it, so lights can be an issue on bad days in general (even just street lights can hurt my eyes sometimes) and those bright car lights even hurt with my eyes closed on those days, let alone if I had to keep them open in order to drive (good thing I don't have a license lmao, I'd absolutely get into an accident because of it)

    • @FRITZI999
      @FRITZI999 Год назад +1

      you arr just concentratin on the bright Spot, their are NOT Brighter, just other Color and a smaller aperture than the Old big Dishes make you focus on the modern ones...

  • @ponchoremerize5508
    @ponchoremerize5508 Год назад +250

    Basically like today, no established standards, and higher cost to consumers. I think we need to standardize more parts in the cars!

    • @lisaw150
      @lisaw150 Год назад +19

      That would solve sooo many problems! As someone who uses an extremely common vehicle (in my part of the world anyway), I can tell you that the knowledge that any garage will likely have whatever replacement part I'm going to need is extremely reassuring, especially on longer road trips. Now, if it wasn't just a common model but things were standardised across ALL (or most) models... a dream! Also much more sustainable, I reckon.

    • @rowlandbuck2703
      @rowlandbuck2703 Год назад +13

      Definitely. People are driving around with high beams on blinding others on LIGHTED ROADS. It’s insane.

    • @stevencooper2464
      @stevencooper2464 Год назад +5

      If we could also standardize drivers, we could have highway heaven right here on Earth; but, alas, humans are hopelessly non-standardized, and getting crazier by the day.

    • @theexcaliburone5933
      @theexcaliburone5933 Год назад +6

      We need investment in public transit

    • @lisaw150
      @lisaw150 Год назад +6

      @@theexcaliburone5933 of course public transport should be the priority, but for some niches we probably have to find a private transport solution too

  • @jamesofallthings3684
    @jamesofallthings3684 Год назад +353

    This was a far better design than a $1500 headlight housing that takes 3 hours to replace.

    • @maxsharpe2194
      @maxsharpe2194 9 месяцев назад +5

      You'll be real upset when I tell you it takes me 30 minutes and I just park it outside.

    • @mikecurry6847
      @mikecurry6847 8 месяцев назад +2

      I can change the bulbs in my truck in like 30 seconds each

    • @Pisti846
      @Pisti846 7 месяцев назад +2

      On my Lincoln I have to remove the entire assembly. And replacing the side marker bulb is excruciating.

    • @user-sd3ik9rt6d
      @user-sd3ik9rt6d 7 месяцев назад +2

      You chose to buy it.

    • @donaldramey1896
      @donaldramey1896 5 месяцев назад +3

      My Lexus RX headlight is $2,600.

  • @konijnization
    @konijnization 4 месяца назад +12

    "too bright" should still be a reason to ban headlight models.

  • @vwestlife
    @vwestlife Год назад +186

    FYI, the rest of those 11 styles of sealed beams were created in the late '80s, _after_ the sealed beam requirement was dropped, when automakers -- especially GM -- wanted smaller headlamps to fit the pointy-nose styling of the era, without the expense of designing and manufacturing bespoke headlamp lenses for them. They were used on cars like the Chevy Camaro and Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme.

    • @fortheloveofnoise9298
      @fortheloveofnoise9298 Год назад +6

      Yea, my 96 Camaro I just sold had the thinnest rectangle lights I have seen

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Год назад +10

      Of course it was GM.

    • @oldsguy354
      @oldsguy354 Год назад +7

      The 1980 thru 1986 RWD Oldsmobile Cutlas used 4, 4x6 rectangular sealed beam headlights. It was the same 4x6 bulb set up (2 hi/low, 2 hi only) that GM started using on many cars in 1976. 1978 and 1979 Cutlass' got 2 (1 combo hi/low each side) of the larger rectangular sealed beam (i think 5x7). The 1987 model year started getting composite headlight lenses. The Camaros got the same old 4x6 through 1992 i think, at least through 89. So maybe you're thinking of trucks or something, they maught have been odd sized sealed beams. The GM B, and C Body cars (RWD Delta 88, LaSabre, Fleetwood, Ninety Eight, Estate Wagons, Electra, Safari, Bonneville/Parisienne kept the 4x6 sealed beam a long time to accommodate the Vigil Light system. (the colored lights on the fenders facing the driver that were lighted via fiber optic cables from a tab on the center of the sealed beam where the molten glass was pinched closed during manufacturing. For real, I'm not making this up, they really did work like that. Lol)

    • @jasomkovac9115
      @jasomkovac9115 Год назад +1

      As I mentioned earlier, I rented a GM impala or sumpin like that, and held a flashlight out the window. It was a good light, I'm not kidding, it was brighter than the headlights. I'm not making a joke, the headlights just sucked that bad, I thank the gods I had brought the flashlight with me. Can't believe there's rules against fixing lights so they work but not against auto makers for making lights that are weaker than the lanterns with candles in em.

    • @vwestlife
      @vwestlife Год назад +6

      @@jasomkovac9115 Are you sure you actually had the headlights on, and not just the daytime running lights (DRLs)?

  • @subaruanon
    @subaruanon Год назад +442

    European countries have triangular stickers that alter the beam pattern of your headlights to drive in countries that drive on the opposite side. Good for example, for people from the UK that drive over to France often. Worth looking into for your Figaro- it won't throw light to the shoulder, but you won't blind oncoming traffic at least.

    • @overkill1340
      @overkill1340 Год назад +8

      If you aren't returning to the home country, you might as well just adjust the lights for your side of the road. Edit: Wasn't there in the video yet. I don't recall my JDM MR2 having this issue, but the headlights might have been replaced before I purchased it.

    • @tdp2612
      @tdp2612 Год назад +56

      @@overkill1340 its not about adjusting, its about the whole reflector being designed to aim light a certain way

    • @pras12100
      @pras12100 Год назад +29

      In the UK, Halfords sell them and call them "Headlamp Converters". They were the first thing I thought of but I do not know who sells them in the US.

    • @machintelligence
      @machintelligence Год назад +15

      France had yellow headlights for many years.

    • @richardcrossley5581
      @richardcrossley5581 Год назад +1

      You would think in a modern european car this is changeable in software. It's been a long time since car companies made country specific cars (Cortina vs Taunus or Cavalier vs Ascona). It would be somewhere deep in that car options menu, but doable. Possibly even set by the Sat Nav.

  • @Turtlejohn8
    @Turtlejohn8 Год назад +68

    It's pretty funny seeing this just now. A few weeks ago, a friend of mine had a headlight out on his car and went to the auto parts store to pick up a replacement. He came out, put the new bulb in, and it didn't work because it was not compatible. Just goes to show how good this idea actually was

    • @AndrooUK
      @AndrooUK Год назад +12

      "Guy bought the wrong bulb, and because it didn't work, I now wish there were one single choice for every vehicle ever."

    • @Turtlejohn8
      @Turtlejohn8 Год назад +28

      @@AndrooUK correct

    • @nonormies
      @nonormies 8 месяцев назад +10

      @@Turtlejohn8 based

    • @Rich96c4ce
      @Rich96c4ce 2 месяца назад +2

      Blame the seller. Or may be your friend for not giving the proper bulb number from the owners' manual.

    • @Turtlejohn8
      @Turtlejohn8 2 месяца назад +5

      @@Rich96c4ce when there's only two bulbs, you don't have to deal with that bullshit. You either get square or round.

  • @rich8761
    @rich8761 2 месяца назад +19

    now we get to be blinded.

  • @vwestlife
    @vwestlife Год назад +196

    We also used to require cars to have real, functional bumpers at similar heights. Now with automakers left to their own devices, anything that looks like a bumper on modern cars is merely a styling suggestion, and the height differences between cars and SUVs means that a minor parking lot bump can now end up causing thousands of dollars of damage -- especially if you end up breaking one of those frightfully expensive modern LED headlamps.

    • @TheBeeMan1994
      @TheBeeMan1994 Год назад +39

      It’s because as crash technology advanced we realized that crumple zones and exerting as much force over the entire front of the car helped saved lives.
      Dying in a 25-35 mph collision was a thing back in the day, now adays, thanks to seatbelts, crumple zones and airbags, you might walk out with nothing more than some cuts and bruises

    • @anthonyferguson7158
      @anthonyferguson7158 Год назад +23

      @@TheBeeMan1994 Except for the fact that now that cars are safer, people drive like idiots far more often. It can be raining hard enough that you can't see more than 10-15 feet in front of your car and yet folks are still trying to drive 75+, knowing accidents aren't as severe as they used to be. It has truly been a double edged sword. I like to drive fast when it's possible and there aren't many others around still, but some people have completely lost that fear of being seriously injured or killed from doing stupid sh*t and just don't pay attention in general.

    • @dwindeyer
      @dwindeyer Год назад +16

      @@anthonyferguson7158 People will expand to fit any gap, including safety margins

    • @nirfz
      @nirfz Год назад +7

      @@anthonyferguson7158 ESC sadly has it's share in that too. Don't get me wrong, it is a good safety feature that has saved many lives. But when it became standard in cars i heard idiots say "nothing can happen, the car has ESC, no matter how fast i drive it can't crash or slip off the road". Nothing ever will be able to cope with idiots that do not understand that physics always win.
      Even autonomous cars will not help, because they will find a way.
      They may be hacked and "tuned" to give their resident idiot "an advantage" over others or do something it isn't supposed to.
      My unpopular opinion is that driving a car needs to be more difficult again. So people focus on driving and learn how to drive properly.

    • @anthonyferguson7158
      @anthonyferguson7158 Год назад +5

      @@nirfz Can't love your comment about stability control and many other safety features enough. It can save people from themselves quite often, but it's not intended to make any car an autonomous vehicle. It's there to give you more margin for error if you accidentally screw up. I'm not saying go completely back to the old days, but people did actually have to pay attention and use some skill when driving before, and they tended to be more cautious because of it. Folks just don't imagine what can go wrong at any time anymore and adjust their driving accordingly for conditions it seems. I'm kind of glad I still drive a 2000 Maxima. It has a 5 speed as well which tends to make me pay attention more just in general. The only real safety features are ABS and airbags, which for me is quite enough, and I know I'm actually the one controlling/driving the vehicle.

  • @PaperWill
    @PaperWill Год назад +143

    I’ll never figure out how this dude pumps out perfect scripts like this so quickly. Good work as always, and never let the pressure of success slow ya down.

    • @Ironic1950
      @Ironic1950 Год назад +3

      The Dude often shows outtakes of his cockups making the vids, so he makes many mistakes, but the research is solid.

    • @CreativeNames101
      @CreativeNames101 Год назад +11

      @@Ironic1950 yea, but those are usually mispronouncing or accidentally conjoining 2 words, and maybe joking around with it. The script itself is captivating, entertaining and informative. I think that's what OP's talking about.

    • @Fymzie
      @Fymzie Год назад

      oh wow didn't expect you to be here :0

  • @smorrow
    @smorrow Год назад +21

    21:20 British/Irish people over 30 all know this. You used to see cars on the road, often with caravan, going to or from France - with "beam benders" installed. (Also, the cheap option: a triangle of black tape...) I don't know how common France as a holiday, and taking your car to get there, really was, but you only had to see it a few times before you asked Dad what that was.

    • @Fe_lix
      @Fe_lix Год назад +2

      And still today it's actually mandatory in the EU to have block off stickers on your lights if you come temporary in a country that drives on the opposite side from your origin country.
      And if you import a car from the UK or Japan to a LHD country in the EU it's normally mandatory to install correct headlights (even for collectible cars). Cars do not pass the semi-annual road worthy control if the beam is not correct.

  • @NBC_NCO
    @NBC_NCO 5 месяцев назад +5

    Most modern cars nowadays require the removal of the front bumper assembly to replace them. Depending on your car...you can easily spend over 150.00 on a headlight or blinker replacement for a 12.00 bulb and a minimum of 1 hour just to remove the facia.
    Those old school lights had a chrome ring and 3 screws and usually took less than 10 minutes for a repair when you did it yourself. Costing you 4 to 10.00 in the 80s.

    • @kerrywsmyth
      @kerrywsmyth 12 дней назад +1

      I have a 2004 Honda Accord and you have to disassemble the wheel well to get to the headlight and change the bulb. I had to have it professionally done and I am very handy.

    • @NBC_NCO
      @NBC_NCO 12 дней назад

      @kerrywsmyth I totally understand.
      It's one of the reasons I got out of the automotive industry.
      They are designing things to be complicated, so 90 percent of all people can't do a simple repair.

  • @baylinkdashyt
    @baylinkdashyt Год назад +372

    12:56 Worth noting here that for many years it was the distinguishing factor between consumer vans and light trucks and the fleet models: fleet managers had no interest in a replacement headlight that cost $300 instead of one that cost... about 12 bucks.

    • @bryonmorgan5208
      @bryonmorgan5208 Год назад +20

      My base model 2006 F250 has sealed beams. I think the current fleet trucks don't use sealed beams anymore.

    • @baylinkdashyt
      @baylinkdashyt Год назад +9

      @@bryonmorgan5208 I have been starting to see vehicles in larger commercial fleets which do not have sealed beam headlines, and I'm not sure whether it is that they have dropped them completely or that they have flipped what is the default. I still see new ones that do have them too in certain cases.

    • @SquishyZoran
      @SquishyZoran Год назад +6

      @@bryonmorgan5208 my dad’s 2015 F-650 has sealed beam headlights while his 2019 f-650 does not. My dad also told me when he went to his auto part store they straight up didn’t believe him that the 2015 had sealed beams

    • @shoveI
      @shoveI Год назад +32

      I deliberately bought a fleet truck brand new in 2015, it was actually part of a USFS fleet order that the USFS declined to receive because it was hail damaged. (I have yet to see any evidence of this damage..)
      In addition to being a brand new, V8, 4x4, tow package, locking rear axle truck for $25k in 2015 it also has the lowest cost headlights and least fidgety crap on it. Stuff can still fail, but it's cheap to replace when it does.
      Coworkers, random internet dorks and the dealer insisted I would get sick of the basic truck and want to "upgrade"... uh it's been seven years still waiting for that urge.. still kinda think the fleet model was the right choice!

    • @BlackHawkBallistic
      @BlackHawkBallistic Год назад +4

      @@bryonmorgan5208 GM has done away with the sealed beams on the Express/Savana van and as of 2019 they would all have the cat eye style higher trims had. The work truck trim silverado/Sierra definitely don't have sealed beam anymore especially after the most recent models.

  • @darrennew8211
    @darrennew8211 Год назад +328

    I remember having to replace a light, and the guy said "Round or square?" That was all you had to know about fixing a headlight. There are chemicals that can clean the oxidation off the plastic of lights, too.

    • @t0raneko
      @t0raneko Год назад +41

      A plastic light will stay clear a couple of months after polishing and then the fog is back with a vengeance

    • @TechnologyConnections
      @TechnologyConnections  Год назад +94

      For some added info, one thing I left out of the video because my memory isn't _clear_ on it was that I'm pretty sure I wet sanded and polished the lights on that van first. They got better but I couldn't get them perfect, and that's why I bought the replacements. Plus, I was always looking for projects to do!

    • @nefariousyawn
      @nefariousyawn Год назад +27

      @@t0raneko I haven't tried it myself, but I have heard that applying a UV blocking clear coat of some kind is the trick to lengthening the life of a restored plastic headlight.

    • @travisthree11
      @travisthree11 Год назад +28

      @@soldiersvejk2053 And even then, they don't last long. We used to do them to cars when I worked at Sam's club. I did it to my own car a couple times. You wet sand it a couple times with a finer sandpaper each time, dry it and apply the clear coat. Sunlight absolutely destroys the plastic headlights no matter what you do.

    • @MrWansty
      @MrWansty Год назад +1

      i use t-cut at least3 times a year ,works pretty well

  • @s4ss
    @s4ss Год назад +29

    I used to work in a European lighting company (big one) and we had a recessed luminaire. At some point we decided to venture into US market. We needed to get this luminaire UL approved. In a nutshell I went from building luminaires to building tanks. Our "mostly plastic" designed was now mostly sheet metal. And the little plastic that did remain was 20..30% glass fiber. We payed a a lot of money for consultations and getting it approved. It felt like market obstructionisms at the time. In retrospect I think there might be more to UL then just milking money from Europeans 🤔

    • @sergiomendez9231
      @sergiomendez9231 11 месяцев назад +4

      I worked for a US lighting manufacturer for a few years. All that sheet metal is for good reason as it dramatically reduces the possibility of building fires from luminaires. Although I do admit, it can be a little excessive and I detested running those tests in the lab.

    • @yankeelongshoreman9113
      @yankeelongshoreman9113 3 месяца назад +4

      I will say, as an American, that UL exists as one of the few times capitalism and the public good do actually mesh.
      UL exists to save insurance companies money. Insurance doesn't want to pay out when a product burns down someone's house, randomly explodes, fails unexpectedly, or other such occurances.
      The public doesn't want to be injured or killed.
      The profit motive happens to line up with the public good in this case, which makes it a self-reinforcing cycle.

  • @MervynPartin
    @MervynPartin Год назад +48

    The auto parts stores in UK now have to stock a huge range of vehicle bulbs, resulting in the individual cost of a bulb being much higher than if there were fewer designs.
    Despite the numbers available, I was unable to get replacement bulbs for my US imports (Chevrolet Astro and HHR) as they were yet another design. If only the World had stuck with Sealed Beam lights, I would have been very pleased.
    I used to stock up with replacement bulbs during our visits to the USA. My wife never objected to a trip to Florida to get some auto bulbs at Walmarts !
    Possibly one further drawback with the plastic headlights. To change a bulb on the HHR, the front wheel had to come off and the arch liner dropped- try doing that at night.

    • @TassieLorenzo
      @TassieLorenzo 6 месяцев назад +1

      "If only the World had stuck with Sealed Beam lights, I would have been very pleased." On the other hand, one can be thankful for "improvements" which never caught on like Michelin metric wheels and tyres. 🙂

    • @crazycoffee
      @crazycoffee 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@TassieLorenzoOh those stupid TRX tires. Id rather work with dry, cracked, over pressurized tires on some Ford two piece Widowmaker wheels than let tires become even more annoying

    • @hquic
      @hquic 23 дня назад +1

      Its a wild concept to me that you imported an HHR

    • @MervynPartin
      @MervynPartin 23 дня назад

      @@hquic I didn't import the HHR, but my wife had located one for sale on eBay in North Wales. We had both driven a rental HHR on our previous visit to the US and like it so much we just had to get one of our own. It was a lovely comfortable car.

  • @thatguybrody4819
    @thatguybrody4819 Год назад +424

    the problem with the much brighter white lights is that when one comes behind you, your nighttime vision goes away and your mirrors become next to useless as all you see are a pair of white orbs. and worse, sometimes the road lanes in front of me disappear and i have to turn on my high beams to see.
    compared to the nice warm yellow of y old truck that lights the road just fine and allows my nighttime vision to remain letting me see a lot more of the area around me without having to blind anyone in front of me

    • @TheDenofBadgers
      @TheDenofBadgers Год назад +48

      Yup, I despise driving at night now a days due to white LEDS

    • @Eralen00
      @Eralen00 Год назад +17

      yeah its gotten way worse in the past year or two. I hate driving at night now, its always a gamble whether someone will be tailgating you like crazy and blinding you

    • @Laodell
      @Laodell Год назад +3

      I have mirrors that I can adjust in the car and I turn the mirrors down a bit at night. I have to dip my head a bit to look at the mirror but it's worth it to be able to see.

    • @TheDenofBadgers
      @TheDenofBadgers Год назад +4

      @@Laodell would be nice if some one made anti glare film for mirrors, I've got tow mirrors on my truck so I'm getting a nice double tap, though there are also a couple trucks so lit up with LEDs all around I swear you can see them from orbit

    • @lmaoroflcopter
      @lmaoroflcopter Год назад +2

      @@TheDenofBadgers modern cars have auto dipping mirrors.

  • @nrgzrbunny7775
    @nrgzrbunny7775 Год назад +406

    My pet peeve with new cars is that the panel lights cannot be dimmed enough. with new cars having huge screens, I find that the screens and instrument cluster almost never go dim enough to allow good night vision. The headlights don't need to be nearly as bright in old cars because you can dim the instrument cluser so much more, allowing your eyes to adjust much better to the dark

    • @ahouyearno
      @ahouyearno Год назад +152

      And the panels are touch.
      Touch in a car should be completely illegal. Tactile feedback is extremely important so you can keep your eyes on the road ...
      I remember when using phones in cars was illegal. Now the car itself is practically a phone.

    • @Ironic1950
      @Ironic1950 Год назад +2

      @@ahouyearno Haptic feedback from the screen to your pinkie?

    • @anthonyferguson7158
      @anthonyferguson7158 Год назад +55

      @@Ironic1950 Still doesn't tell you that you pressed what you were aiming for.

    • @muzzthegreat
      @muzzthegreat Год назад +33

      Truth : panel lights cannot be dimmed enough - I fidgeted with mine the other night and found I was already on lowest - BOO!
      I have several tints of window film though - planning to 'stealth' my dash-cluster anytime soon.

    • @nirfz
      @nirfz Год назад +9

      They can't? When was that ditched? I mean my two cars are 10 and 12 years old, but not only can i dimm the (still analogue) gauge cluster down to completely dark, the small radio/nav display (non touch) i can dimm too, but it already does have a daylight and night setting that it switches to according to ambient light which actually works quite well.

  • @avlisk
    @avlisk 10 месяцев назад +4

    I remember in the 1980's, a coworker got into a minor fender-bender that broke his Mazda's headlamp. When I was paying $5 to replace my sealed beam, he was spending a few hundred dollars to replace his. I've always preferred the older lamps.

  • @SlverNexus
    @SlverNexus Месяц назад +2

    I love your wit and sense of humor I learn and laugh a lot in all of your videos. Thank you!😂

  • @onogrirwin
    @onogrirwin Год назад +311

    I'm an auto mechanic, and sealed beams are a nice occasional surprise. Most anything beats several hundred dollar plastic headlights that require removing the bumper to replace the bulb. The plastic covers/lenses are 100% guaranteed to need replacement at least once over the life of the car, and parts plus labor is going to be an extra $1,000. That's 1/25th of the purchase price of the car to replace the headlights one time.

    • @my3dviews
      @my3dviews Год назад +5

      If your car is in a garage most of the time, then it might go its lifetime without needing the lenses to be replaced. Since it doesn't get the UV light exposure when inside.

    • @nutbastard
      @nutbastard Год назад +31

      The covers can just be polished with fine abrasive compound and sprayed with UV resistant sealant, no need to replace the housing unless they're cracked or broken.

    • @joshuagibson2520
      @joshuagibson2520 Год назад +19

      Logic is not allowed in the current world we live.

    • @eddierayvanlynch6133
      @eddierayvanlynch6133 Год назад +3

      @@joshuagibson2520
      ⬆️ Yes, unfortunately, this

    • @Kalvinjj
      @Kalvinjj Год назад +8

      @@joshuagibson2520 When phones in 10 years became disposable jewels, cars might as well.
      Is housing following the same trend too? Hope not but you never know...

  • @samroberts7404
    @samroberts7404 Год назад +267

    About your "backwards" headlights issue. As a Brit, when we take our cars onto mainland Europe we have to fit something that my dad always used to call 'sticky dippers', basically bits of plastic you stuck to the headlight glass to mask off the part of the dimmed beam that was on the wrong side of the road. More modern ones seem to have some lensing in them to cast that light back across to the shoulder where they are meant to be. Have a look for "headlight deflectors UK to Europe" they generally only cost about £5 and might mean you can drive your Figaro at night again...

    • @1crazypj
      @1crazypj Год назад +6

      Nice to have an update. I thought I had seen some 'reflective' type stickers but I've been living in Florida 23 years and not visited 'home' too often

    • @rogerwilco2
      @rogerwilco2 Год назад +12

      Yes, I was wondering why he wasn't using those.
      I thought they were even required by law.
      And the reverse when visiting the UK from Europe.

    • @jaskajokunen3716
      @jaskajokunen3716 Год назад +7

      People who import jdm cars here have to adjust headlight pattern otherwise the car is illegal for road use 🤔

    • @IanDarley
      @IanDarley Год назад +7

      @@jaskajokunen3716 Same in Europe/UK and you WILL be stopped for it. Also the car would not pass annual inspection so would be banned from the road and since UK cop cars have ANPR cameras linked to a database they don't even need to be looking for you, as soon as you come into view of the cop car's camera you are done.

    • @peterrenn6341
      @peterrenn6341 Год назад +13

      If you're posh you go for the modern lensed sticky dippers. If you're cheap you use the black plastic stickers. If you've completely forgotten the bloody things and are now in the ferry queue you improvise with electrical tape :-). While on the subject, does anyone else remember the little bottles of yellow dye to PAINT your headlights? That was to comply with the (thankfully now repealed) French legislation requiring yellow-tinted headlamps. Good for cutting glare, not so good for illuminating anything more than 10 yards away. Happy times..

  • @brymanfantana4044
    @brymanfantana4044 Год назад +108

    Another thing about modern headlights, they put off no heat and when driving in the snow are susceptible to becoming clogged with snow or ice that sticks to them making it much harder to see. This is a minor problem that sealed beams never had.

    • @SkittleKicksPlays
      @SkittleKicksPlays Год назад +14

      No heat but they yellow thanks to our friend UV

    • @fivish
      @fivish Год назад +2

      No heat from the 55W halogen bulb?

    • @windhelmguard5295
      @windhelmguard5295 Год назад +15

      @@fivish he said modern.

    • @HuskyGamersUNITE
      @HuskyGamersUNITE Год назад +12

      LED traffic signals or retrofits with an LED bulb have the same issue. My city still had halogen traffic signals from 1972 in use at the intersection nearest me up through 2017. The VERY SECOND they switched to LED signals those suckers had burned out blank spots on the "bulbs" within a month of use, and that winter they were full of snow and ice making them totally unviewable. Nobody could see them. Gotta love how modern society takes something that works and has no issues, throws it away because OOOH COMPUTERS and fucks everything up just for the sake of fucking it up.

    • @thatguythatdoesstuff5899
      @thatguythatdoesstuff5899 9 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@HuskyGamersUNITEAlex made a video on led traffic signals.

  • @Zyo117
    @Zyo117 11 месяцев назад +2

    I fully agree with regulating headlights tbh. This was a much better solution than modern bulbs. I've even seen a Chevy Bolt (which isn't a remotely old car) with both LED taillights dead, and using the backup taillights on the bumper. Regulation leads to consistency.

  • @steprockmedia
    @steprockmedia Год назад +385

    You've got to be one of the only channels that will go in-depth on some small topic like this.
    It's strangely mesmerizing and educational. The sort of thing I'd never intentionally seek out, but I'm never mad I watched!

    • @42luke93
      @42luke93 Год назад +7

      Found the last topic to be one of the most interesting fun facts. Never knew the headlights block the left side and can be backwards on imported cars since they block the right.

  • @iainballas
    @iainballas Год назад +221

    I hate it so much when I've got someone behind me with near-orange turn signals and bright bluish headlighs, mkaing me think I'm being lit up by police here. I work nights, so I drive in the dark both ways, and it's frustrating how some people's regular lights are as bright as many other's brights.

    • @kw9849
      @kw9849 Год назад +50

      It's getting really bad, it feels like I'm constantly being dazzled when I drive around at night these days.

    • @kadenstimpson3167
      @kadenstimpson3167 Год назад +40

      People in my area don't even know the difference between their brights and regular lights

    • @glidershower
      @glidershower Год назад +34

      They're clowns the lot of them. They would piss themselves driving a 100% pitch black road, yet they think they're cool flexing 5k lumens on a well-lit highway or city road. I really loathe them too.

    • @user2C47
      @user2C47 Год назад +13

      @@kadenstimpson3167 There have been cars that have been taken to the shop because they accidentally turned on the high beams.

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Год назад +15

      people in my area drive around with their brights on in daylight. and they drive with no lights at dusk or in the rain and fog.

  • @skellysgarage
    @skellysgarage Год назад +13

    Another excellent video.
    As a side note I’m pretty entertained by the presence of old Soviet cars in this video.
    I saw the Volga, Chaika, and the GAZ-53 truck.

  • @Vodhin
    @Vodhin Год назад +24

    Wow, what an illuminating video! I'm dazzled by how you shine a light an old subject long lost down a deep and dark well of automotive history. You, sir, are truly brilliant!

    • @faradaysage15
      @faradaysage15 Год назад +1

      it was very eloquent, however, he's just flat out wrong. he makes it seem like automakers and engineers were ignorant of a wonderful design but that's not the case at all. imagine replacing this technology and adding 3 to 500 dollars to he cost of a $7,000 sedan... and doubling the space on store shelves after you magically manufactured millions of bulbs and distributed them magically as well. the plastics technology we had in the 1970s would have probably yellowed before the end of the model year rather than the three to five years they do now in modern vehicles.
      when a rock breaks your headlight in 1976, it cost you $4. in 2016 it costs you $500+. in my 1994 Lincoln it was 1200 for one side. but hey good thing the bulbs themselves are only 35 bucks instead of $4 like in the 70s. oh, wait..

    • @luisbalderrama8145
      @luisbalderrama8145 Год назад +4

      I see what you did there. Have a like.

    • @ImDemonAlchemist
      @ImDemonAlchemist Год назад +1

      @@faradaysage15 You seem to have missed his entire point. The things he's talking about were done very successfully in other countries without issue. Not to mention, writing a long comment to complain about the video in a reply to someone that was just complimenting the creator is just rude.

  • @ericbaumann4255
    @ericbaumann4255 Год назад +129

    One other advantage of sealed beams is that they get hot, which means they melt ice and snow to keep your lights clear in the winter. I have an old truck that I put retrofit LEDs in, but after getting caught in a nighttime ice storm and having my lights encased under a half inch of ice, I put the old halogens back in.

    • @spencerwarren8302
      @spencerwarren8302 Год назад +35

      You should check out technology connections other video on traffic lights, Aparently the first led traffic lights had a similar issue so they added heating elements to them

    • @zackbongle9967
      @zackbongle9967 Год назад +11

      @@spencerwarren8302 Living in Wisconsin I remember this happening. Fancy LEDs went up, first blizzard and all the lights facing the wind were plugged solid.

    • @transtubular
      @transtubular Год назад +3

      So you don't clear your vehicle of snow/ice before taking it on public roads? I'm sure everyone driving behind you really appreciates that.

    • @BambiTrout
      @BambiTrout Год назад +19

      @@transtubular Of course they clear their car. The issue, as mentioned by the commenter immediately above you, is that if you are driving during a blizzard, the snow sticks to LED bulbs and covers them while you are still driving - there's no built in way to keep them clear.
      Old headlamps got hot enough that they would always melt the snow off. LEDs are both fortunately and unfortunately designed to be a lot more energy efficient, and therefore do not get hot during use - which is great most of the time, but really inconvenient when you need it most.

    • @stevevarholy2011
      @stevevarholy2011 Год назад +1

      I believe he was saying that the lamps did not clear themselves of the ice and snow that accumulated on them while he was driving.

  • @mtfan
    @mtfan Год назад +168

    One of my favorite parts of Car & Driver magazine’s long term test fleet recaps is the maintenance cost section and, specifically, the cost of replacing a headlight housing. Most are upwards of $1700 now which is just crazy when you can get 90% of the performance for literally 1% of the cost with a seal beam setup.

    • @6z0
      @6z0 Год назад +9

      But, realistically when are we changing the entire housings nowadays? Unless they get somehow damaged then yeah, but you usually only need to replace the bulb. Which is about the same if not cheaper than what an entire housing cost back then. Not to mention, most housings nowadays are not $1700 unless it’s an HID or Projector setup. Your basic honda civic halogen housings are like $150 for a pair.

    • @andrewbrowning6357
      @andrewbrowning6357 Год назад +8

      You absolutely cannot get 90% of the performance from a sealed beam lamp though. Have you driven a modern car and a sealed-beam car back to back recently? Modern headlights are *miles* better in every way. Plus, with modern LED lamps the expensive part is the driver and the cooling solution, not the lamp chassis, so the cost advantage of a sealed-beam lamp disappears - the glass and reflector are the expensive part there, and thus achieve greater economy of scale in a sealed-beam setup.

    • @kw9849
      @kw9849 Год назад +2

      @@6z0 I suspect their cost to replace the housing includes the labour, of which a fair bit is required to just get the assembly out on many late models.

    • @6z0
      @6z0 Год назад +6

      @@kw9849 Labor? To take out 3 bolts holding the housing in place and fitting a new one in? Uhh, sure. That’s why you don’t pay people to do simple jobs on your car.

    • @Old_BMWs
      @Old_BMWs Год назад +12

      @@6z0 Many if not most new cars require you to remove the entire bumper skin to replace the headlight assembly, just like the Honda van in the video. It takes at least a half hour even for an experienced mechanic.

  • @DavidFraser007
    @DavidFraser007 Год назад +4

    I was an army mechanic, no matter the actual repair job, adjust headlights was always on the list. Most British military vehicles had the same Lucas Headlamps.

  • @CecilMerrell
    @CecilMerrell Год назад +10

    Adding this as a separate comment, you can buff off the oxidation on those plastic headlight assemblies. I use the turtle buffing compound with a cheap second hand orbital buffer. Then wipe it off. They get cleared up very nicely after that.

    • @interstate80.
      @interstate80. 2 месяца назад

      Yeah it’s just something you gotta do with those every once in a while

  • @Halarue
    @Halarue Год назад +86

    12:42 imagine you’re in 1984 and you finally expect a giant leap for automotive technology and the first car that comes out is the Lincoln Continental

    • @rwright2046
      @rwright2046 Год назад +11

      Believe it or else, Ford had it goin' on in the early 80's. The Mustang 5.0, Thunderbird turbo, and Mk VII LSC were big friggin deals back then.
      Sincerely,
      Dude who was really into cars in the early 80s

    • @Halarue
      @Halarue Год назад +1

      @@rwright2046 fine I believe you - I’ll admit I don’t know a lot about this specific car I just thought the joke sounded funny.
      Which American car from the mid eighties would you recommend looking into?

    • @rwright2046
      @rwright2046 Год назад +7

      @@Halarue I had to think about it for a bit. If you want to understand the US car industry in the early 80s, the place to start is…the 1982 Cadillac Cimarron! It was GM’s answer to the BMW 3 series and it was terrible. Once you see how bad American cars could be, you can appreciate the ones that didn’t suck.

    • @JK061996
      @JK061996 Год назад +4

      The Mustang SVO was also supposed to debut with flush headlights but the new regulations hadn't been approved yet, so it came out with that weird design

    • @300DBenz
      @300DBenz Год назад +1

      @@rwright2046 uhg, the Cimmaron, that car represented EVERYTHING wrong with General Motors.

  • @Spannertech728
    @Spannertech728 Год назад +243

    I distinctly remember going on vacations in France (Left hand drive cars) taking our British car (Right hand drive) in the 1960-70s. Not only were we required to apply a special clear paint to make them yellow to match French headlights, but we had to stick what was basically black tape over one quarter of each headlight to block the beam that would otherwise blind oncoming drivers. Apparently from another comment this is still happening but maybe no longer the yellow paint.

    • @semifavorableuncircle6952
      @semifavorableuncircle6952 Год назад +25

      I remember my last car having a template in the manual and some small lines integrated into the lights themselves for aplying tape on the headlights for wrong-side-countries.

    • @stephenlee5929
      @stephenlee5929 Год назад +14

      I think there used to be Clip-on covers, which were yellow and altered the dipped beam to be left hand side.
      I'm not sure how well they worked.

    • @SharpblueCreative
      @SharpblueCreative Год назад +12

      Ah the joys of driving on the ‘wrong’ side of the road.

    • @Konsumkruemelmonster
      @Konsumkruemelmonster Год назад +15

      When coming to the UK with our car from Germany just 3 months ago, we were required to attach stickers called "Beam benders" in a specific location on both headlights. This way our light beams were bent (in the portion pointing into the wrong corner where they would just blind other drivers) to point the right way.

    • @TCA17
      @TCA17 Год назад +13

      ​@@Konsumkruemelmonster were you informed of this when entering the country? I plan to do the same in December, but didn't know of this headlight incompatibility until 25 minutes and 20 seconds ago

  • @billybeemus3929
    @billybeemus3929 Год назад +9

    6v systems (and headlights) were briefly mentioned. If you have never experienced 6v headlights, imagine driving your car with a wax candle sitting in front of an aluminum pie plate functioning as the the headlights. That is about how bright they were.

    • @HuskyGamersUNITE
      @HuskyGamersUNITE Год назад +1

      people did not drive at night back then, so it wasnt necessary. and i have driven 6v cars before, the lights are perfectly fine. get your eyes checked.

    • @mikafoxx2717
      @mikafoxx2717 Год назад +4

      @@HuskyGamersUNITE sounds like they put 12v headlights into the 6v socket.. quarter the power output.

  • @electron2601
    @electron2601 5 месяцев назад +20

    I HATE headlights on new cars now. They're all different and they're all extremely expensive because they make them overly elaborate.

  • @RyanEglitis
    @RyanEglitis Год назад +339

    I hope they're doing more than "letting us have adaptive beam headlights." They still don't address the actual problem of people using too bright of beams, because they don't react fast enough when people go over bumps or come around corners quickly. They really need to look at how many lumens the headlights throw out and in what pattern - LEDs often end up blindingly bright in one spot because all the light is focused there.

    • @willmather4046
      @willmather4046 Год назад +45

      Yeah came to say this. You always can tell the cars with adaptive beam headlights cause they’ll blind you for a split second when coming toward you. Makes driving much less pleasant for other road users.

    • @StubbyPhillips
      @StubbyPhillips Год назад +59

      There are also some LED brake lights out there that are *WAY TOO FRIGGIN' BRIGHT* . When I get stopped behind these obnoxious dolts at a stop light I have to lower my sun visor until they take their foot off the brake.

    • @Alpejohn
      @Alpejohn Год назад +7

      @@willmather4046 Well, i guess a normal human wont react fast enough either to not blind you..
      What annoys me alot is when i meet cars with automatic high beams, and many of them turns them back on the second your headlights are not visible any more so you get a bright flash in the side window or right before it passes your A pillar. Adaptive headlights are actually really awsome i think, as you can drive with full lights behind other cars and still see alot out to the sides etc.

    • @RyanEglitis
      @RyanEglitis Год назад +42

      @@Alpejohn The whole point is that humans with old headlights wouldn't blind you either because they were simply using a reasonable bightness level.

    • @Alpejohn
      @Alpejohn Год назад +5

      @@RyanEglitis Yeah, but driving with old weak headlights sucks.. 😛 I cant stand weak headlights, but i guess that also depends on where and how you live. I drive alot in dark areas with alot of deers and stuff so i need good headlights..

  • @hagen-p
    @hagen-p Год назад +308

    In German car manuals there is/was a section about how to modify the headlights for when you drive in a left-hand-side-driving country (e.g. England). As I remember it, you had to add some triangles of duct tape at the right places of the headlights to avoid glare for oncoming traffic. (I never drove my car to England, so for me this was a curiosity.)

    • @mikemx55
      @mikemx55 Год назад +18

      Same thing in Portugal, in some cars, it was cheap to just buy the correct headlights, and not use the ugly tape.

    • @eekee6034
      @eekee6034 Год назад +12

      We had the same instructions in Britain, but presumably mirrored. :) Most people prefered to either just paint the headlight yellow or buy a sort of stick-on lens though.

    • @TheDailyRant2023
      @TheDailyRant2023 Год назад +7

      No longer applies. I drive in Europe regularly (UK driver + car) and the only legislation is that your lights must not dazzle other drivers. I've never once been stopped or flashed in my UK 2018 Renault Kadjar with unmodified headlights, nor on my previous vehilces.

    • @PendelSteven
      @PendelSteven Год назад +5

      @@TheDailyRant2023 And good for it. Ever since the chunnel it wouldn't make sense anymore, ey?

    • @markwright3161
      @markwright3161 Год назад +5

      @@TheDailyRant2023 In the off chance he managed to read a comment left 2 weeks later, I looked up info about the stick on beam deflectors in case they could be a solution to the issues he is having with his RHD Nissan, and while doing so I found that LED headlights are suggested to have a flatter beam than halogen bulbs/headlight lenses, so this is likely why it's no longer required and probably why your relatively new Renault doesn't get flashed. I don't know that your car actually has LED headlights, but I seriously doubt you could drive on the right without altering the beam otherwise.

  • @waynestewart1919
    @waynestewart1919 Год назад

    I am greatful for your safety and practicality observations. You are very astute, and it is appreciated.

  • @ageekdude7722
    @ageekdude7722 Год назад +2

    There are not many people I watch that I would compliment their captions. You’re videos are a great exception to that. Love these videos and your captions, especially at the end of the video

  • @jamessouthworth1699
    @jamessouthworth1699 Год назад +84

    Most of the cars I grew up with had sealed beam headlights and they never got foggy or dull. They were always Crystal clear until they burned out.

    • @OOZ662
      @OOZ662 Год назад +2

      Handily, because they had a crystal on the front.

  • @hagerty1952
    @hagerty1952 Год назад +18

    You left out one really major advantage to having these standardized lights. With only one type of light in two variants, the production runs were enormous, in the 10's of millions, so the prices were very low. If you had, say, an 8-million car year, that's 16 million lamps and probably an equal number for the replacement market. In the '70s and '80s, I remember a "regular" sealed beam going for maybe $2 and a fancy halogen one for $5 (about $5 and $12 today, respectively). Generally they were so rugged that they could last 10 or 15 years and I only had to replace them when the lenses got too eroded by rock chips.

  • @CFITOMAHAWK
    @CFITOMAHAWK Год назад +1

    Im not bored of my old school headlamps on my Jeep. I love that style. And very safe too for others.

  • @TheOrby77
    @TheOrby77 2 месяца назад

    Thanks for this kind of videos, it's always a pleasure to watch them. Simple and clear. It's not an easy trick to perform !

  • @TheLegoflims
    @TheLegoflims Год назад +183

    Don't get too excited for adaptive headlights, Being randomly blinded because the giant suv in the other lane has decided you don't exist anymore is honestly worse then them just having brights on

    • @ericwazhung
      @ericwazhung Год назад +3

      Here Here!

    • @rosiefay7283
      @rosiefay7283 Год назад +24

      This issue affects pedestrians, too!

    • @michalhudek
      @michalhudek Год назад +14

      To make adaptive light good is not a easy task, I dont dispute they dont exist. They are good in expensive cars, in midrange as cost cutting take place they are terrible. Not for driver, so he keeps using them to make everyone else suffer

    • @Iceeeen
      @Iceeeen Год назад +17

      I meet a Tesla every morning with that fault. The idiot haven't cared to have it fixed for almost a year yet. Just turn on highbeams now when he comes. Overall automatic headlight is shit for oncoming traffic and they do not work. Should never been allowed.

    • @LX.M
      @LX.M Год назад +7

      True. This is extremely funny as a truck driver on a highway when the modern LED-equipped car in the opposite direction doesn't "see" your headlights and keeps blinding you as if you didn't exist.

  • @Lizlodude
    @Lizlodude Год назад +124

    A thought on LEDs;
    I feel like a significant issue with large LED lights (headlights, street lamps, etc.) is that they are too _intense_, rather than necessarily too _bright_. I've seen many street lamps that have the same 'blinding to look at' quality that LED headlights tend to have, but that give barely half the illumination on the ground as the old sodium lamp. Where in the past, very bright incandescent, halogen or various discharge lamps would tend to have very large filaments/light-emity-bits, modern LEDS can get absurdly high brightness out of often a single diode (or COB config) that is millimeters wide. Then you put that in a normal reflector, and you get a tiny spot of crazy bright light. It would be nice to see new reflectors and maybe diffusers used in LED lights to help mitigate that.
    It would also be real great if people would stop taking their lifted trucks with headlights 4 feet off the ground and aimed dead flat and adding giant fog lights that are actually high beams, but that's a different issue...

    • @Azlehria
      @Azlehria Год назад +7

      Hah. Around here the big ticket (unfortunately not in the sense of a citation) is using off-road light bars as headlights. Sometimes more than one, and always flood pattern.

    • @mytube001
      @mytube001 Год назад +13

      Yes, exactly this!
      Old headlights are much better since they rarely had the surface brightness to blind you. Modern projector lamps and LEDs have far, far too much surface brightness, even though they may well be within specs (legal limits) for total light output.

    • @Brandyalla
      @Brandyalla Год назад +15

      "It would also be real great if people would stop taking their lifted trucks with headlights 4 feet off the ground and aimed dead flat "
      Exactly at rear-view-mirror height, and thus shining directly into your soul

    • @awo1fman
      @awo1fman Год назад +8

      I've noticed lately that a lot more attention is being given to LED optics. A lot of LED lamps that used to always be as you describe are now being fitted with frosted diffusers and real optics rather than slapped-together lenses or -even worse - no lens at all, just a clear cover.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Год назад

      @@awo1fman that’s great!

  • @theangryasianguy
    @theangryasianguy Год назад

    As an owner of a 1978 ford Fiesta which used that bulb, i totally appreciate the video! Thank you for the video!

  • @SecondLifeTravels1
    @SecondLifeTravels1 Год назад +3

    Who would have thought a video about headlights would be so interesting? Great job!

  • @jammybizzle666
    @jammybizzle666 Год назад +315

    The most amazing thing about those old lights is there temperature resilience, not even jet fuel can melt sealed beams

    • @alpham777
      @alpham777 Год назад +13

      Or steel beams.

    • @Craxin01
      @Craxin01 Год назад

      @@alpham777 Let me guess, 9/11 truther? They didn't need to be melted, just weakened. Ever see someone cut through rope to free themselves in a movie? They don't cut them all the way through, just far enough to pull free. Plus, the beams in the twin towers were set on trusses, and those were what needed to fail, not the entire beam.

    • @Sonny_McMacsson
      @Sonny_McMacsson Год назад +5

      bravo, Vince

    • @thevinmeister5015
      @thevinmeister5015 Год назад +2

      Ha

    • @joshuaewalker
      @joshuaewalker Год назад +2

      Too soon

  • @8-7-styx94
    @8-7-styx94 Год назад +156

    My dad's old service trucks used sealed beams. They were the nicest thing in the world to replace, just a few quick turns of the screws and popped right out. Hell that's the only reason as a teenager I was able to change my own glow plugs in my old diesel. Realizing that stuff could be done with only a modicum of knowledge and practice was a huge confidence booster and resulted in a lot of care being applied to that car, more than it probably deserved honestly. Now if only we could do that with modern cars...

    • @Elmojomo
      @Elmojomo Год назад +3

      I think you'll find that changing the headlight bulb on most modern cars is even easier, if you take a moment to look think it through.

    • @tomtom7955
      @tomtom7955 Год назад +7

      @@Elmojomonope, working on old vehicles is so much better especially if you go back to before fuel injection was common, you had so much more space to work in, minimum electrical stuff to deal with its pretty much all around more diy friendly. not to mention you can get really good gas mileage if you know how to tune your carb , 40mpg in an small block v8 and still be perfectly drivable good.

    • @LifeisGood762
      @LifeisGood762 Год назад +6

      @@tomtom7955 How are you getting 40 mpg in a carbureted small block v8? I'm amazed when my efi 4.6 ford modular gets 28.

    • @stefanfrankel8157
      @stefanfrankel8157 Год назад +12

      Wait till they start charging you a monthly fee just to _use_ your headlights.

    • @Elmojomo
      @Elmojomo Год назад +3

      @@tomtom7955 Oh, I totally agree! I had a '62 Chevy II Nova that was a dream to work on. I could actually sit on the fender inside the engine bay and work on the engine in the rain without getting wet. lol
      I thought you meant just changing headlight bulbs. That part is actually easier in most modern vehicles, since you can just pop out the old element and insert a new one. :)

  • @harold6863
    @harold6863 Год назад +15

    Have a look in the handbook for your small car. Some are designed to concert the shutter by turning the shutter. Failing that you could mask the offset with tape. We used to do that in the Uk trawling to mainland Europe. Great video really enjoyed it.

    • @AndrooUK
      @AndrooUK Год назад +3

      You can buy stick on lenses to bend the beam the other way.

  • @wonniewarrior
    @wonniewarrior 5 дней назад

    In Australia in the 80s / 90s, the standard 2 filament was Low beam (55w) and High (60w). But for some of the cars it was plastic headlight lens. My friend 'upgraded' his globes with 100w/110w globes and melted the lens cover and set fire (smoldered) to the wiring from lights to battery. So we drove all the way home with ineffective parkers.
    My car had the glass lens but it got hot one summer so the indicator lens sealant on the passenger side melted off and the lens fell off.
    Also the double filament rear globes are 21w(brake)/5w(parkers-tail).
    Also a sealed beam was damn easy to replace too on side of road. Unlike modern cars nowadays with minimal space to move your hand to unclip the damn things and maneuver the globe out - all sight unseen.

  • @EricAdamsYT
    @EricAdamsYT Год назад +146

    I was hoping this was going to be a rant about modern headlight glare which makes driving at night particularly difficult for me. I’m glad to hear they are finally taking a look at it.

    • @Pa11en
      @Pa11en Год назад +35

      Amen, modern lights are so blinding one has to look away to the outside line to not be night blinded.

    • @jmkhenka
      @jmkhenka Год назад +35

      Dont celebrate allready. Adaptive/auto-off high beams are worse. They glare more, turn off to late and are extremely bright.
      They are great for drivers, I have tested the adaptive LED-versions and they are cool. But I also get flashed by oncoming traffic - the headlights does not "adapt" fast enough and sometimes dont work like they should. A 1-2% error rate is still to high

    • @kw9849
      @kw9849 Год назад +28

      In the last 5-10 years, driving at night has become really frustrating thanks to all the late models dazzingly you so easily. It's only getting worse as lights get brighter and those older ones start to fall out of alignment.

    • @CherryGS
      @CherryGS Год назад +6

      @@jmkhenka I've been driving a MK3 Ford Focus with auto-dipping headlights (HID) from 2015 to 2018, and the only real challenge for the autodipping was driving on the Autobahn, as the guard rails tend to hide the headlamps of oncoming traffic (especially trucks), while the drivers got to "enjoy" my highbeam. In 2018 this car was replaced by a MK4 Ford Focus with selective beam LED headlights, and that's working great on country roads. I might get flashed about once a month, but that's about the same rate i got flashed when i first started driving a car with (manual) HID headlights. Some folks are just overly sensible. Driving on the Autobahn is still a challenge for the selective beam, as long as the front camera can't look through the guard rails.

    • @jensharbers6702
      @jensharbers6702 Год назад +7

      @@jmkhenka They aren't. Some LED systems are worse in detecting cars, but Audi and BMW as well as Polestar (with the 2) have great adaptive "permanent high beam" systems, that detect well and acting fast.
      Also: Most drivers don't know to adjust the headlights for the loading of the vehicle, most LED and Xenons have auto-leveling. In germany, there are every day less cars with halogen and honestly, I'm glad that they go "out of fashion". Because what blinds me the MOST are poorly installed or adjusted halogen headlights. And since the sealed beam wasn't a big deal here where I live, H1, H4 and H7 are the most common lamp types so there can be many mistakes made replacing the bulb. Some LED systems are still a pain in the butt, but they are rare.

  • @robertfine5131
    @robertfine5131 Год назад +74

    Back in the 70's and 80's there was an aftermarket headlight made by Cebie called the Z-beam. It had a lens with a very sharp horizontal cut off so that the light went on the road rather than the trees and other drivers' eyes you got a much better view.

    • @kamX-rz4uy
      @kamX-rz4uy Год назад +7

      I've had cars with sharp cut offs like that. They are great on flat roads but suck where it's hilly or even on slight declines. You can't see what's ahead where the road goes level or up again.

    • @tacomas9602
      @tacomas9602 Год назад +4

      @@kamX-rz4uy my old pickup I made room for two more regular sealed beams just for that reason. Those Z beams were awesome

    • @raypitts4880
      @raypitts4880 Год назад +3

      rally boys used cebe ozkers in the 60's i still have 2 on my van from 1982
      guess what they 100 watt halogen
      not your 45/45 bulb. plus 1 100 watt spot 2 miles
      and 2 broad spread for going round corners. still passed its mot
      uk england gb

    • @androidemulator6952
      @androidemulator6952 Год назад +1

      LOL, memories,, i had bought a pair of Cibie Z-beams,,, vast improvement at the time. :)

    • @Voxphyle
      @Voxphyle Год назад

      Modern day projector headlights have an almost totally clear cut off line.

  • @stevenbryant4718
    @stevenbryant4718 Год назад +16

    Standard headlights also meant that judging a cars movement by on coming or other angles was easier also.

  • @bobert286
    @bobert286 5 месяцев назад +1

    I know this is not necessarily a RECENT video, but I'm curious if you have noticed this too:
    The way you have naturally started to document these subjects has shifted to more 'begrudgingly reminding myself that they actually DID have a good reason to do this at the time' attitude than a 'my lord this is ABSURDLY idiotic it happened like this...' attitude. I have watched the channel for a long long while (albeit off and on over the years) - it has been really cool to see that level of professionalism really blossom right in front of our eyes like that!
    That is a wonderful sign of really caring about the quality of your work and being responsible with the size of the audience you have. Kudos man, I just wanted to give you some love for that because it crossed my mind. If it only takes a minute or two to type out, then it is worth spending those few minutes to mention it - keep up the great work! 🤙🏼

  • @taylors5869
    @taylors5869 Год назад +54

    for glass vs plastic it's related to the reflector technology. pre mid 90s, they used a smooth reflector and then used fresnel ridges on the glass lens to focus the beam pattern. mid 90s and later they had complex multifaceted reflectors which allowed clear polycarbonate lenses

    • @peterkiss1204
      @peterkiss1204 Год назад +3

      Polycarbonate would still allow using Fresnel lenses though. As far as I know polycarbonate headlights are mandatory in the US for new designs due to being less fragile and much less dangerous in case of an accident with pedestrians.

    • @johndododoe1411
      @johndododoe1411 Год назад +1

      The first Fresnel lenses I experienced were soft plastic magnifying glasses that were kind of weak, with the pattern lines interfering with whatever needed to be seen and magnifying.

  • @powerchordgamer
    @powerchordgamer Год назад +120

    I wish they could better enforce proper aiming and maybe have a brightness limit, at least when facing other cars that you might be blinding. I'm a bit sensitive to light and driving at night is mostly fine for me (I basically never use my brights), but oncomming traffic is almost always blinding. especially with the large number of modern cars that have really bright lights for their regular low beams its really tough for me. I've even flashed my brights at people thinking they have their brights on only to be blinded back even worse. seriously, someone needs to figure this crap out.

    • @dielaughing73
      @dielaughing73 Год назад +10

      It's mindboggling to read this in Australia. We have regulations on all of this including no red indicators

    • @maoman4855
      @maoman4855 Год назад +24

      "I've even flashed my brights at people thinking they have their brights on only to be blinded back even worse."
      This right here infuriates me so much, because I can't even be mad at the driver, it's the fault of our whole US automobile system, and aimless anger is the worst kind.

    • @ModMINI
      @ModMINI Год назад +23

      It's really bad. The lights are so bright that even if you can avoid staring into them and getting retina burn, you can see absolutely nothing in front of you until the car with a sun strapped to its front passes. only to be followed by another one doing the exact same thing.
      We also have lots of giant pickup trucks and SUVs here with the lights mounted like a meter off the ground. it's really bad.

    • @daledavies2334
      @daledavies2334 Год назад +11

      @@maoman4855 Used to be a wattage limit for lights; 55/60. Ìt may still apply, but new technologies on filaments allow more candlepower from the same wattage. Mandatory annual or every second year with checking headlight aiming would help.
      A few years ago Dodge came out with real bright lights on their P/up trucks. Then for work, 500 pounds or so of tooling was put in the back, without adjusting the headlights down.
      About 2015 Ford came out with the update that keeps all 4 headlights on all the time. Bad enough but then guys purchase brighter bulbs. Then you have the numbnutz that think 4 lane divided hiways were built so they do not have to dim their lights.
      Then in Canada we have the DRLM, or Daytime Running Light Module. This energizes the hi beam filaments while in gear through a resistor. This is to make the vehicle more visible. GM has a light sensor that also turns on the running lights in the dark. This is a good feature as those on DRLM have headlights but no tail lights. How the dimwits do not realise they do not have tail lights on when the dash is not lit, is beyond me. And where are the police that do not pull people over for no tail lights or driving on hi beams all the time?

    • @alexanderkupke920
      @alexanderkupke920 Год назад +3

      At least here in Europe there are limits. Initially on Wattage as someone mentioned before, which doesn´t do anything with modern full LED headlights of course (regulations are different here). When the first cars switched from halogen lights to Xenon lights years ago, at least around here it was necessary that the car had leveling sensors, to adjust the headlights level automatically. Same is valid for modern LED headlights. It does the same as the dial on older headlights where you had to turn the dial up with a load in the back to actually swing the headlights down. the manual approach of course almost never worked due to user ignorance. At the same time, I know a number of cars where, even with the sockets kind of keyed, it was possible to mount for example H4 bulbs upside down or crooked, which left you with a nice set of blinders as well. I am somewhat on the fence with older Xenons, but at least for LED it sems manufacturers got a grip on it and those never seem to blind me under normal circumstances.
      All those regulations are by the way also the reason, why almost no legal Kits were around here in Europe (or especially Germany) which allowed you to retrofit Xenons or LEDs to your car. Just lately there are some LED replacements for H4 or H7 lamps which are legal with at least a number of vehicle models (list is growing over time).
      Other than that, being extremely sensitive to blinding at night can indeed be a medical condition. In severe cases around here this may even prevent you from legally driving at night.

  • @dgrblue4162
    @dgrblue4162 Год назад +1

    My grandfather drove a 1980 El Camino. It had rectangular glass headlamps. He said if I have to have the plastic crap, it's a sign for me to stop driving. He was in his late 60s and he rarely drove at night, anyways

  • @itsKochon
    @itsKochon Год назад

    really interesting as usual! as a jdm cars enthusiast i must admit i didnt even know about the headlights aiming to one side or the other. it does explain how subpar my friend's r32 night time driving experience was though!

  • @btryba
    @btryba Год назад +290

    We should have a petition to bring back the sealed beam lights, and force standardization on alternators, steering pumps and AC compressors. It's at the point now where I'm pretty sure they just change the design every two years to make sure you have to buy a new one from them so you can feel the hurt of the supply chain.

    • @LifeisGood762
      @LifeisGood762 Год назад +6

      I'm torn on this

    • @naghi32
      @naghi32 Год назад +21

      I`d love to be able to go even a bit further than this, wheel bearings ? standardize by wheel size/ weight required, shocks ? the same, pretty much standardize anything possible, EGR ? standardize by engine size/power, engine mounts ? standard !

    • @marcusmoonstein242
      @marcusmoonstein242 Год назад +29

      You're right about the manufacturers doing it on purpose. Back in the day they would deliberately use bizarre non-standard nut and bolt sizes on new models to force mechanics to buy new (overpriced) spanners from the vehicle manufacturer. It took federal regulation to put an end to the practice and standardize the nut and bolt sizes.

    • @shala_shashka
      @shala_shashka Год назад +14

      @@marcusmoonstein242 They still do that in the tech industry. In every product. Ever.

    • @halnwheels
      @halnwheels Год назад +6

      I get why you say this, but these are items that are not safety related. And where would it stop? There's already too much government in out cars today IMO.

  • @RegularCars
    @RegularCars Год назад +17

    This is relevant to my interests.

    • @SimHQFan
      @SimHQFan Год назад

      Not enough BROWN in this ep though...

  • @DragoCubX
    @DragoCubX Месяц назад

    Huh, learned a new bit of trivia - and kinda important for me, since I'm aiming to import my dream US oldtimer myself in a few years! Glad I stumbled over this now

  • @bigmikeosg7753
    @bigmikeosg7753 7 месяцев назад +1

    I love your videos, no matter what you cover, I can watch from start to finish. My dad managed an advance auto for many many years, and I remember helping stock these on weekends. Some of my best memories were in his store. I also remember stocking oil, there used to be race car trading cards in certain cases. He’d let me keep them, wonder if anyone remembers that

  • @mattheweburns
    @mattheweburns Год назад +118

    There was also a regulation on height of headlights from the ground that totally went out the window sometime in the past decade or so so now you have vehicles with their main headlights directly At eye level of other drivers

    • @21stcenturyozman20
      @21stcenturyozman20 Год назад +32

      Definitely a pet peeve of mine! I drive a real car (i.e. a sedan), not an SUV or truck, and I've given up night driving because those new high-set lights blind me. Another thing I hate about modern car lights: they are far too blue (i.e. 'cool' white). A warmer, more yellow light gives far better vision than does a blue one. IMO, headlamps should be limited to about 3700 kelvin.

    • @MX26_
      @MX26_ Год назад +21

      For real. I drive a pretty low and small car even for European standards, and i get blinded by so many crossovers and SUV's (especially when when they are behind me), not because they are doing anything wrong, but because their lights are directly at my eye level, burning my fucking eyes out.

    • @animeartist888
      @animeartist888 Год назад +14

      This. I have learned hatred for the drivers of the big pickups purely because having them behind me for any more than a split second is literally painful.

    • @abelq8008
      @abelq8008 Год назад

      Every new jeep.

    • @razvanlex
      @razvanlex Год назад +1

      @@21stcenturyozman20 SUV's I think are the real cars. The first cars had good ground clearance, they were taller, the driving position higher, you could drive with a hat on...😀

  • @lohphat
    @lohphat Год назад +108

    A similar law existed in France where all headlamps were YELLOW to avoid glare until 1993. Search for "Selective yellow" in the wiki.

    • @reggiebuffat
      @reggiebuffat Год назад +5

      Nope, not for glare. It was to identify non French cars at night in times of war.
      You know, so you can strafe them. 🇩🇪

    • @airlink2142
      @airlink2142 Год назад

      The modern lamps yellow with time. XD

    • @450AHX
      @450AHX Год назад +1

      @@reggiebuffat Huh? I don't buy that. It sounds more like someone might have taken advantage of the distinctive color during war. When was the regulation put in place?

    • @mycosys
      @mycosys Год назад +3

      you missed the 'in fog' bit - the yellow minimises scatter, thats why fog lamps are generally yellow too

  • @TEDdotcom
    @TEDdotcom Год назад

    Why did I wait two months before watching this?? This video has some really, really helpful information. Thank you for doing this.

  • @lordleonusa
    @lordleonusa Год назад +1

    I really like your well considered and thoroughly researched videos

  • @1crazypj
    @1crazypj Год назад +11

    When I lived in Britain it was common to get a 'sticker kit' to apply to headlights when driving 'on the continent'
    It prevented dazzling oncoming drivers.
    It may not solve your 'unable to see' but would prevent people 'flashing' at you on low beam

  • @ftfwpww028
    @ftfwpww028 Год назад +128

    I don't understand how nobody sees anything wrong with the new led headlights. I work night shift so going and coming home from work in the dark. I'm pretty much blind on the commute because of oncoming traffic, and just waiting for the accident to happen.

    • @thewolfin
      @thewolfin Год назад +17

      You're not alone. I have to use my sun visor at an angle to block the entire oncoming lane of traffic. Thank god there's a highway divider for most of my commute. But I guess we're just supposed to take the bus if we can't deal, because it's gonna keep getting worse.

    • @ms_cartographer
      @ms_cartographer Год назад +2

      The LED lights on my 2nd gen Volt are so bright, I pretty much never use my high beams. I don't need to.

    • @dddontshoot
      @dddontshoot Год назад +9

      If we have to live with led lights, can we at least make defusers mandatory please?

    • @MrCarGuy
      @MrCarGuy Год назад +14

      The CCT (color temperature) of the LEDs has much to do with eye strain and fatigue. The harsh cold light coming from most headlights just sucks. It should be around 3000K or below to be less straining to other drivers

    • @lmaoroflcopter
      @lmaoroflcopter Год назад +4

      I'd suggest getting your eyes tested. Your ability to adjust to bright and dark conditions does slow with age, it is not unusual for you to notice this whilst driving.
      If you have an accident because you are having issues seeing at night, that's on you.
      LED headlights are fantastic in my opinion. Better colour temperature, better at lighting the road ahead, automatic levelling, auto dipping/adaptive beam patterns, minimal light spill into opposing traffic, etc.

  • @edmondmartinez9617
    @edmondmartinez9617 7 месяцев назад

    I drive a 75 maverick with the dual round 7" sealed beams. And right after i got the car this video came out. The genuine original lamps were terrifying, went to the store and got halogens which were nice,. Then because of what you showed here, i was able to find a proper projector bulb LED replacement as well that could be adjusted for US or European spec with regards to the shoulder throw of the light. This made a bigger difference for my life than even the worlds greatest toaster i got a while before. So thanks again for all you do, it does make a difference.

  • @benmcreynolds8581
    @benmcreynolds8581 Год назад +5

    Have you ever noticed that all new headlights seem to be aimed straight up into your eyes when driving at night? Plus now they are so much brighter. (Remember being told we would get a ticket if our headlights shined up into oncoming traffic?)

    • @ZagorTeNayebo
      @ZagorTeNayebo 10 месяцев назад

      I feel like it's cause cars are in general getting taller

    • @benmcreynolds8581
      @benmcreynolds8581 10 месяцев назад

      @@ZagorTeNayebo I've wondered if people just aren't angling their headlights correctly? Or do a bunch of crazy people just drive with their high beams on even in traffic nowadays? Back when I was you people got pulled over all the time if they thought your lights were angled up at all..

  • @davidlynch5748
    @davidlynch5748 Год назад +49

    I'm sure there's a whole other video in this, but as a lot of people have alluded to with the complaints about lights being too bright, there's another whole area that we're behind on. From what I've heard, standard for the amount of light headlights put out was designed for filament bulbs so it underweights bluer wavelengths relative to what the human eye sees, and that means that LED headlights are putting out more photons in visible wavelengths than older designs which are considered equally bright according to the standard, and also bluer LED lamps are worse for allowing your eyes to become adapted to the darkness outside of the beam than the more yellow/orange incandescent and halogen bulbs.

    • @brettspencer-curran8269
      @brettspencer-curran8269 Год назад +8

      Not really. Candela is candela regardless of color (it is wavelength weighted based on the eye response curve). The regs are written with mins and maxes specified in candela.

    • @Bacteriophagebs
      @Bacteriophagebs Год назад +15

      @@brettspencer-curran8269 No, that is completely wrong. Wavelength matters a LOT. Red and amber have much less effect on night vision than blue and violet light with the same candela. That's why the Army used to issue their flashlights with red and amber add-on lenses. The shorter the wavelength, the more it hurts your night vision.

    • @olegil2
      @olegil2 Год назад +3

      @@Bacteriophagebs Yep, the difference is only in how the light affects night vision, not really in number of photons.

    • @brettspencer-curran8269
      @brettspencer-curran8269 Год назад

      @@Bacteriophagebs you are talking about scotopic response curve. Yes that is more sensitive to blue light but in general with modern headlights you are halfway into the photopic region of the human eye response so you aren't nearly as sensitive to blue as you think.

  • @grazynazambeanie5963
    @grazynazambeanie5963 Год назад +61

    I remember when the smaller round headlights first came out , the auto makers claimed that with the small lights they could lower the hoods on cars , of course the first thing the auto makers did was stack the two smaller lights on top of themselves , I think that started with the 1957 Rambler

    • @government_costumes-ui5lx
      @government_costumes-ui5lx 9 месяцев назад

      AMC rules!

    • @gemanscombe4985
      @gemanscombe4985 8 месяцев назад +1

      Stylists always win out b/c styling is what sells cars. It's the only reason the new (2000s) Beetle ever sold at all. The mechanical design was completely subservient to the shape. Replacing the alternator started with removing the entire front fascia/bumper cover, but ladies thought the car was cute.
      Car makers see headlights as styling cues first and night vision aids second. Some new models are ugly simply b/c they have to be different and the stylists ran out of good looking differents. Good functioning different, not their concern.

    • @Rich96c4ce
      @Rich96c4ce 2 месяца назад

      Resulting in better fuel-economy for cars other than the Rambler. BTW, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is required to regulate the fuel economy of new motor vehicles as well as safety.

  • @memegusta42
    @memegusta42 Год назад

    Thanks for the JDM headlight info, I was not aware that was even a thing. great vid!

  • @mcw1593
    @mcw1593 Год назад

    I was waiting for you to mess up the description of the mechanics of how a halogen light bulb works... and then you didn't. Thank you for your constant attention to detail!

  • @jsnsk101
    @jsnsk101 Год назад +109

    Another benifit of these headlights was you could actually see the oncoming cars turn signal as it wasnt tiny and in the same unit which was designed for looks and not function

    • @SkyhawkSteve
      @SkyhawkSteve Год назад +11

      that's something that annoys me too. I understand that making a light module makes assembling the vehicle easier, but putting the turn signal right next to the headlight means that it is much harder to see the turn signal when the headlight is on. I miss the days when turn signals were easily visible from the side too.

    • @nkgagne
      @nkgagne Год назад +3

      The oncoming car usually isn’t using its turn signal anymore because nobody seems to bother… Annoying!

    • @td23asus
      @td23asus Год назад +7

      I FUCKING HATE THIS SO MUCH!
      Aussie here, as a driver, and also someone who helped around my uncles mechanic shop, I fucking hate most new car headlight clusters with a passion. SO many cars will have indicators that are hard to see from a certain angle, or in the dark are overwhelmed by the headlights, and it drives me up the wall. Not to mention that so many new cars have icredibly painful to swap lights, its maddenning. I like the flexibility of modern standardised incandencent and halogens, however some manufacturerers make it way to hard to replace. My own car, which is a 2005 Honda Accord Euro, its a lovely thing and as cars go pretty no nonsense, with a bit of luxury. But in order to replace the parking lights, you have to go in through the wheel well. And not to mention that the fog lights are held in with a slot in tab and a single pastic push in clip, which fell out on mine and I was driving around with a fog light that was hanging out of its socket for a while before I realised!
      And then you have modern LEDs, which so often are dazzlingly bright, and especially on larger cars like SUVs, are often right at my eyeline in my sedan. And, Leds arent a self contained replaceable part. I'd love if we had some standardised led bulbs or whatever, like we do with older incandescent lights, but we dont, as far as im aware. If any light goes out in my car, its generally super easy to replace. Brake lights, indicators, cabin lights, easy and easy to find in stores. A set of bulbs cost like maybe 10 bucks and I keep some in my car just in case.
      So many cars would come in with rear brake strips that had like one or two led's out, and once you lose enough ya gotta replace the whole bloody thing, and it costs a fortune. Same with fancy modern LED headlight clusters. If car makers started using more standardised LED parts id be hyped, but no. AND yellowing plastic, and all that good stuff.
      Okay rant over its just annoying lmao

    • @markylon
      @markylon Год назад +2

      There are cars in the UK now that when the signal is flashing the headlight on that side actually turns off.

    • @maoman4855
      @maoman4855 Год назад

      @@markylon That's pretty common here in the US too. I think people just aren't noticing them.

  • @johnkarakash
    @johnkarakash Год назад +16

    I was in Okinawa when they went from right-side driving to left-side driving. There were ad campaigns the likes you've never seen before and when people got their headlights fixed before the switchover date (which was required by law), you had to keep a piece of weather-resistant tape across the middle to be removed at the right time.

    • @x--.
      @x--. Год назад +1

      This is a thing that happened in the modern era? Wow, I had no idea... I really can't imagine why but I'm sure there was a very good reason and not just some anti-American sentiment.

    • @cloudkitt
      @cloudkitt Год назад +3

      They switched? I assumed that was just how they started. Why would you switch to the less common practice?

    • @frequentlycynical642
      @frequentlycynical642 Год назад +2

      Sweden did the opposite. Switched from left side to right. Maybe in the 1970's? The weird thing is that their Saabs and Volvo's always had steering on the left.

    • @trueilarim
      @trueilarim Год назад

      I quote: ”With the Vienna Convention on Road Traffic entering into force in 1977, and earlier 1949 Geneva Convention on Road Traffic, both requiring member states to have a uniform traffic direction throughout the country, post-occupation Japan was obliged to bring Okinawa in line with the rest of the country and international practice. Owing to assorted bureaucratic wrinkles, however, it was not until 1978 that Okinawa finally made the switch to left-hand drive.”

    • @trueilarim
      @trueilarim Год назад

      And to be fair it would be pretty strange if only one small island would drive on the other side than the rest of the country. And expensive since they would need to have different cars (or at least headlights) than the rest of the country.

  • @jessemartin2698
    @jessemartin2698 Год назад

    Getting JDM car guy tips from my favorite niche tech channel wasn’t what I was expecting and was a very genuine surprise

  • @clifton4566
    @clifton4566 Год назад

    I made a flashlight using one of these (12v) and the battery from a little Black and Decker chainsaw. Worked great, but it got pretty hot so eventually I switched it with some LEDs made for a truck.
    It's ridiculously bright, doesn't get hot, and the battery lasts way longer than I expected. I used it for over 2 hours straight out in the freezing cold and it still had plenty of charge left.

  • @LA_Commander
    @LA_Commander Год назад +76

    I remember in the Army we had a bunch of vehicles which still used the sealed beam type. Hummers, trucks, even tanks. They performed well, were durable, and fairly easy to replace. Nowadays those older halogen sealed beams are getting replaced with LED headlights which are also circular and fit in the same spot. Honestly, I think the older halogen beams look better at night.

    • @tridocao143
      @tridocao143 Год назад

      ok

    • @42luke93
      @42luke93 Год назад +7

      I cant stand daylight color at night and so i hate LEDs! I like halogen for soft white color! This is not considered for some reason with modern LEDs.

    • @stoopidhaters
      @stoopidhaters Год назад

      The problem with LEDs as well is they are supposed to last for 10,000 Hours yet barely reach that mark due to Driver Failure or one dead LED. These issues can be fixed, but why would you wanna waste time fixing a fucking

    • @buddyclem7328
      @buddyclem7328 Год назад

      @@stoopidhaters Why would anything that the driver does shorten the life of an LED headlight? If you mean improper heat sink installation, the blame would be on the installer, who may not be the driver of the vehicle.

  • @marklee81
    @marklee81 Год назад +45

    The truth is that too many people have too many competing opinions and they drown out the experts. Classic cars had these lights as "limitations" and are still classics. It surprises most people when you point this bit of trivia out. I don't think we should go completely backward, but there's issues today with style over safety and I think everyone knows it.

  • @ericx7476
    @ericx7476 Год назад +1

    Those lights are so nostalgic. I sometimes miss them.😢

  • @CowSaysMooMoo
    @CowSaysMooMoo Год назад +2

    1:40 As an adder...High beams only had *2* connectors in a 4 headlamp setup

  • @thejuanderful
    @thejuanderful Год назад +42

    There was a push to use polarized lights that would have eliminated glare from on-coming traffic and made the roads much safer at night. The car companies squashed the idea in 1947 because of lack of economic incentive. Unfortunately it wasn't mandated by law, which was how we implemented seat belts.

    • @nikolaus2688
      @nikolaus2688 Год назад +3

      Well, the problem with polarized light is that you're instantly halving the output.

    • @sauercrowder
      @sauercrowder Год назад +3

      ​@@nikolaus2688 Well, the problem with that being the problem is who cares.

  • @serhiirudenko6183
    @serhiirudenko6183 Год назад +12

    That two cars you showing during the video- old soviet Gaz and Zil- actually have headlights that contain replaceable light bulb. You can unscrew the front glass and just install a new bulb, or even there are cheap LED lights that fit in there.

    • @darkcheaker
      @darkcheaker Год назад +3

      The weirdest thing that those are incompatible with the headlight of the video (sorry for the pun) being Soviet cars with different regulations. I know that because I tried retrofitting US light from eBay on my ГАЗ once.

  • @Rettro404
    @Rettro404 8 месяцев назад

    The adaptive beam headlight thing is a shock as i did own a vehicle that did utilize that feature and i live in the states. It must have been modified by a previous owner but it sure was a great experience and im glad its being released in the us market widespread.

  • @yit555
    @yit555 4 месяца назад +1

    My old truck uses the quad square lights. I also have an old 1992 Geo Prizm, which surprisingly has glass styled headlamps. They’ve never faded after 31 years.
    It’s almost like the plastic ones they make today last just long enough for the car payment to run out…