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Reviewed in the United States on February 17, 2025
Lasted 6 months before one blew out. How is that possible? Junk parts.
Darrellb
Reviewed in the United States on September 28, 2024
I bought these to replace my other fog lights that are apparently illegal because of the slightly blue color they emit...i guess white or yellow are the only ones that are legal where I live...these are very bright and easy to install
Matt
Reviewed in the United States on September 15, 2024
Work fine on a 2020 Kia Soul
BigBadAndy
Reviewed in the United States on July 26, 2024
Installed these in a 2014 Subaru Legacy. Install was easy and they definitely help in foggy conditions. Can't really atest to the life of these but they do help with seeing better.
miked
Reviewed in the United States on July 25, 2024
Lights were bright for the short time they were on. However, these were not compatible with my 2009 Mercedes SL550 Canbus. I tried them both with and without a bulb decoder / Canbus resistor. In either case, they flickered and put a warning on my dashboard.
OBP.
Reviewed in the United States on July 18, 2024
Changed out my foglights to this and helps with seeing through the fog and sheets of snow through snow storm. Drove through the Colorado mountains during a flash snow storm heading home and it saved my life. I’ve been a sealight fan even my LED headlights haven’t disappointed me yet. It’s been nearly 8 years and I haven’t changed them yet.
K
Reviewed in the United States on June 29, 2024
Haven't been able to install on my car yet since my fog light installation does require removal of pans and access from the bottom and it has been raining a lot lately.Put them on the bench, and they were bright, polarity didn't matter and the following was measured:* at 12.1 VDC the current consumption was 1.53 Amps, equating to 18.5 Watts. The listing says these are 30W bulbs. Having said that, I wanted them because they are 30W and not higher and because power is actually disclosed (other suppliers sometimes don't even list power ! ), the higher the brightness (lumens) the higher the power, the amperage consumption, and the heat on your cables. Depending on your car, the original halogen bulbs for fog lights may have been 35 or 55 Watts, and you don't want to exceed that unless you plan on upgrading cables and harnesses. So if this thing reads 18.5 Watts.. that is fine for me. The unit is rated for 9 to 18 VDC, and across that range power was still around 18.75W. The power supply used has a 3 Amp rating and the multimeter had a 20A rating, so neither was limiting the bulb.* given the power discrepancy of 18.5W vs 30W, I have no way to measure the rated brightness of 10,000 lumens. These may be much lower... who knows... but if they are bright enough for their use, that's good. Too bright for me is a risk, you can blind an incoming car and create an accident... way too many cars blind me now adays. On the bench in a dark room, they seemed pretty bright. Will see once installed.* I also liked these because they have no fan. A fan will eventually fail. Higher power units will need a fan. Having said that, as they stayed ON and heated I was barely able to touch the metallic base. With an IR sensor the measured temp came in at 50 deg C . I haven't measured other LEDs at this power and lummen rating to compare.I have installed other LEDs of a different form factor for the headlight, taillight, brakes, but these are the first ones bench tested for amperage/power and temperature. Wish I did that with the others. Will update once installed in the vehicle.
Jose Gutierrez
Reviewed in the United States on April 30, 2024
As I was tightening the light onto the fog light the connector and the light broke off, the plastics very weak but from the other light that didn’t break the light was really bright and very visible at night
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