I'm moist, just thought I'd share.
I'll let you know how it goes.
Thats all for now!
Moderator: martauto



















Side of an old washing machine works a treat...aceraf wrote: Please do post up what metal you use in the creation of the cross-hairs.

????Ziggy wrote:Side of an old washing machine works a treat...aceraf wrote: Please do post up what metal you use in the creation of the cross-hairs.



Cheers dudeaceraf wrote:great write up....
I'll be interested in the cross hairs.....i attempted it, but found the metal i was using was too flimsy, and looked poo once painted and test fitted!
Please do post up what metal you use in the creation of the cross-hairs.




He'll need to do both if he's sticking with the pre-facelift lights...d6dph wrote: Saying that, it's only on highbeam so not often used for most people.




I'm going to finish scoring the other 3 halos tonight with the trusty butter knife and I'll sit some of the black acrylic on a lamp next to me so I can keep an eye/nose open.dodgem wrote:As long as the angeleyes are a snug fit with the outer edge of the lights then the heat shouldn't be a problem - if it gets hot enough to bend (or unbend, as you mentioned you had to be careful of in the oven to make them go flat), then they will just try and unbend against the light housing and not move much if at all. The only danger is the acrylic getting so hot it catches fire, and i very much doubt the inside of your dipped lights gets anywhere near that! Even 300C in the oven would only make it bubble after a while.... have you ever touched your headlights when they are on? They aren't at 300CThe mainbeam should be fine for the angeleyes too as the bulb will be relatively far from the acrylic - again, leave them on for a while and touch the glass.
As for the crosshairs, the mainbeam will be hotter than the dipped beam, but since you haven't formed the acrylic at all it won't unbend. I would be more concerned about it bubbling though. The crosshairs sit right near the bulb, whereas the angeleyes are at the edge of the light...
I don't know how much hassle it is to try it and see - never taken my lights apart, but tbh i think it would be ok.
Not sure how many watts the mainbeam are, but try placing the black acryllic a few millimetres from a 60W bulb in your house (keep a careful eye on it ofc!!). Leave it there for half an hour or so and see whether it feels soft at all - you can make a judgement based on that and the power of your mainbeam bulbs i reckon. Remember that the mainbeam bulbs are enclosed in a small space so the heat won't dissipate as fast as it does from the house experiment, but again, make a judgement based on the power - if mainbeam bulbs are only 30W and the acrylic was fine near a 60W house bulb then you'll be ok.
Watching this thread with interest - i'll be trying this myself soon i think