Tuesday, October 7, 2014

All about shiny bright headlights!

This blog post is for educational purpose only to understand different types of automotive lights that are available in the market today. I am not recommending the usage of high powered bulbs. Those are illegal and a safety hazard.

Ever tried driving in the night on Indian roads? Ever felt the need for brighter headlamps? I am trying to put together all that I know about brighter lights based on my research.

It all starts with one person deciding to go against law. As per law in India, halogen light upto 60w per bulb are allowed to be used as headlamps on vehicles. But then,  more often than not, those tourist buses, cabbies and some private vehicles decide that 60w of lights is not enough and upgrade to 100w, 110w or even 130watts of halogen bulbs. That is what is blinding the oncoming traffic. Mind you, none of these lights are street legal - which means it is illegal to use them for driving on public roads.

Now, as a fellow user of the road, these blinding lights are a safety hazard for you. You will not be able to spot any obstructions (which are plentiful) on the roads, you may not be able to see the edge of the road. These lights also put tremendous strain on your eyes. No amount of flashing the lights will make the oncoming persons to use the dipper or low beam. That is when the insatiable urge to get even with equally or more powerful blinding lights play tricks on your mind :).

Broadly, there are three different types of lights available in the market today:

1. Halogen bulbs
2. HIDs
3. LED

1. Halogen Bulbs: 

Cars in India primarily come with different types of halogen bulbs which are marked as H4, H1, H7 etc. H4 type is most popular and comes with two filaments - one for low beam and another for high beam. The filament is tungsten and the bulb is filled with some type of halogen gas. Now, there are OEM direct replacement bulbs that provide upto 100% additional light for the same wattage. Which means, there is need to quantify the light produced.

Wattage is rough way of looking at brightness of the light, the actual way to measure is lumens. For eg, a standard 100w bulb will provide 1500 lumens of light. Ideally, we would like 1:1 mapping in terms of wattage and lumens which would be 100% efficiency. So, the bulb is operating at 15% efficiency which means, the remaining 85% is dissipated as heat. So roughly a normal 60w bulb would produce 900 lumens of light. Some brands like Philips Xtreme Vision use a different gas to charge which has better efficiency and for the same wattage ie 60, it will produce higher lumens - not sure about the exact amount though - due to which it produces more light. Since the wattage is same, it is safe to use as direct replacement for original bulb.

Now, if one is upgrading to 100w bulb, then, following things would occur:

W= VA. Circuit is designed by original car maker for 60w. So W=60. V is constant from your battery = 12v. So, for a 60w bulb operation, the A would be w/v = 60/12 = 5Amps. Now, if you replace 60w bulb with 100w, then A would be 100/12=8.5 A. Combine this with the efficiency of the bulb which I mentioned above. This leads to two problems:

a. More current flowing through the circuit, overloads the wiring and will lead to melting of insulation of wires again leading to short circuit.
b. Excessive heat generated due to high wattage bulbs. So the plastic holder designed for 60w melts and leads to short circuit.

So, if one is to upgrade to higher wattage, appropriate wiring kit that includes a relay and ceramic holders is required. The entire setup will cost around 2000 Rs including bulbs. If the bulbs are of higher wattage than 100w, then there is a serious risk of the plastic reflectors turning black in the headlamp assembly. Mind you, the bulbs dont last as long as the 60w ones as well.

2. HID

We need to understand three things here:
a. Project headlamps
b. HID upgrade kits
c. Bulb types

HIDs are primarily to be used only in a projector setup. HIDs are street legal upto 35w IN PROPER SETUP. There are some cars that have reflectors that are specifically designed for HID bulbs but then, most of the cars are not. Before we get into other things here, we need to understand how the HID bulbs work. In a traditional halogen bulb, the tungsten filament lights up to provide the light. In a HID, there are some super duper expensive salts (some iodides) which create an arc when HIGH voltage is passed through them. How much voltage? probably around 25000 volts. Yes, you read it right, around 25KV for the initial arcing to happen. So when you switch on the headlights, around that much voltage flows through the bulb to create the light arc but then, once arc is created, it requires lower voltage to sustain around 42V. Remember, your car battery is 12v. So, that is where a ballast comes into picture. Ballast is essentially a step up transformer (intelligent one) which provides that kind of voltage for the arc to happen and to sustain. So, by now, you would have realized, HID is not just about plug and play of HID bulbs. The main component is the ballast and the entire setup will cost around 12000/- rs. Each bulb will be in the range of 3000 Rs. Now, for intelligent cars that display that one of your lights have gone kaput in MID, need something called canbus ballast which is generally costlier. There are cheaper HID kits in the market but they are not durable.

So with that theory, let's get started with the projector headlamps. The HID bulbs scatter light in all directions ie 360*. So to prevent glare and provide the focus for the headlight, projector lenses are used which is what gives that cool look to headlights, like the ones that are available in BMWs, Mercs and other high end cars and now, in the likes of TATA ZEST, XUV500 as well.

The HIDs produce different colors and is what is denoted by the 6000K, 4300K, 8000K marking. The light is red/yellow in the lower bands like 4300K and become whiter at 6000K and at 13000K it is purple. The most suitable for driving are 4300K and 6000K. Others are fancy color lights - thats about it.

Now, the projector setup comes with expensive cars and after market projectors is difficult to source as different cars have different headlight shapes.

That is where the HID conversion kits come into picture. What that does it gives you a way to fit HIDs into your existing reflector headlights. By now, you have realized that it involves additional wiring for ballast and the HID bulb will throw light is all directions. Most likely you will not be happy with the focus after the installation - so it requires a good skill have it focused right. Also remeber, 35w of HID light is almost 2200 lumens which means, it is brighter than 110w halogen bulb. So, with a better conversion efficiency, the bulb tends to heat less, and less damage to headlight assembly. However, note that the initial arc requires 25000 volts that puts tremendous stress on the circuit. So that is why, you see most cars that use HIDs use it as low beam - once the lights are on, it stays on. High beams require switch off and switch on operation which makes high beam not so suited for HIDs. This, in the 4 lamp setup with 2 low beams and 2 high beams. There is no concept of low beam filament and high beam filament in H4 HIDs so they are called bi xenons which is trick used to provide high and low beam with a cover that moves in front of the xenon bulb when you switch from low to high and vice versa.

Finally, the HID bulbs are marked as D4R and D4S which specify the usage. D4R stands for reflectors and D4S stands for Straight (projectors). D4R has some glare removing at the front end of the bulb where as D4S does not. D4S should not be used in reflectors. D4R is for use in reflectors that are specifically designed for xenon - example 2010 Toyota Corolla GL model. It is another matter that corolla xenon bulb costs around 10500 Rs per bulb, yes you heard it right, in dealerships.

3. LED

This is the newest trend and does not require any kind of ballast for wiring. The efficiency is also slightly better than HID - at around 27W delivering around 2200 lumens. But, the challenge is to find the right fitment to your reflectors. Also, although LEDs have better efficiency and generate less heat, the LEDs are susceptible to the heat generated by them which is far less than the normal halogens. So, some LEDs come with cooling fans that particularly pose a challenge to direct fitment. If you find a good LED bulb that fits your car type, then if you go upto designed wattage, you will get some serious bright light. For eg. a 45w LED can throw around 4000 Lumens. Probably that would be too bright for your eyes to drive, let alone the one coming from the opposite side.

Hope this post helps clarify the doubts that you have in your mind about headlamps.

Disclaimer: All the above information I have published based on my research and please use discretion before you decide to take the plunge. Please note the usage of higher wattage bulbs is illegal. Even the auxiliary lamps are illegal for street use and should be used for off road purpose only.

- Aravind



Sunday, September 7, 2014

Some updates that I missed earlier

Quick update:

Changed first set of two original (Goodyear) with Apollo Acelere purchased from changemytyre.com at 36000 KMs. Going strong after 21000 KMs. Initially had them do the duty on front wheels until I changed the remaining two with the same Apollo Acelere at 46000 KMs. At that point, moved the first set of Aceleres to back and had the new ones installed at the front. At 60K service which is another month away, will have them rotated.

- Aravind Kamath Posral

Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Inddie Gets Insecure!

There's a new kid on the block. Inddie's feeling a little insecure...Hey but wait, thinks Inddie, Boss is still driving me around more than that guy! May be, I will not be the long distance cruiser anymore..or may be I will continue to be the mainstay... That guy is showing off...but I am still the workhorse...thinks Inddie.

And Inddie's insecurity is not without any reason....




Watch this space for more...

Saturday, May 3, 2014

The 50000 KMs Service

The car had clocked 50488 KMs when I gave Inddie for service on May 2nd. Was attended on time by the SA at Concorde Dairy Circle. This time, I observed that the person manning the coffee counter was well dressed, like an up-scale restaurant waiter, but was not serving or even asking customers for tea or coffee. Never mind, that is not an issue because I will be more than happy if my car is taken care of.

Back to the service - when I mentioned 50000 KMs service to the SA, he scribbled many things on the sheet and then asked me for list of issues. I reported a problem with front right strut, which was leaking oil and making sure that I feel it all the way till my spine, every small imperfection on the road. I also reported a problem with A/C vents not throwing enough volume of air as they used to before.

SA noted down both of them and said my service estimate will be around Rs. 7500 excluding the cost of strut, which he will inspect whether to change or not. Now 7500 is exorbitant for a normal service - so I start reading what is written. Straight away I got rid of engine decarbonization and engine flush as this was done at 40000 KMs. I did not face any symptoms of carbon deposits like black smoke, knocking , low FE or low pickup. So why fix something that is not broken. That apart, TATA recommends that these things need to be done ONLY if there are symptoms. The two straight away saved me around 2300 Rs.

Car was promised at 5 PM. Around 3 PM, I got a call that strut and brake pads also need replacement and will cost around 8000/-. I authorized the replacements. Car was delivered at 6 PM. The final bill was 11595/-.

The last service with no replacements costed around Rs. 9000+. Makes me think, if I keep spending around 10K for every 10000 KMs, i am spending around 1 Rs / KM as maintenance. Now, that is not acceptable. I can vouch for the service Concorde has provided me so far - it has been good. But I need to be mindful of costs too. In the bill of 11595, around 4000/- alone is labor charges. Thinking if TATA motors have smaller AUTHORIZED workshops and I can get the work done there, it would save me some money. All said and done, if the brake and strut replacement was not there, then my service would have costed me approx 5000/- which is still ok.

-Aravind Kamath Posral

Thursday, April 10, 2014

The Strut Story

Went to Concorde Dairy Circle today for repair work. At the gate, the security did not issue the "pink slip" which they otherwise issue with the car KMS and the order in which the car was received. Parked the car and reported at Service front desk. The lady asked me to sit. And, there I sat. And there I continued to sit.

Problem that I wanted to report: oil leaking from Inddie front right strut.

Ok, back to repair story. After 30 mins, the front desk lady brings a mechanic to me. Good hearted guy with good intentions. Says "Sir, car has already done 48200 KMs, fix this with 50K service only, that way one shot everything is taken care of. Today everyone is busy anyways"

I say " OK, i am driving around 800 KMs or so in the next week on highways. Will this cause a breakdown"

He Says "No, dont worry"

I say "OK".

I drive my car back to work after spending 1.5 hours in the whole process.

So, what is the point I am trying to make here? The point is very simple, getting a repair done at concorde outside of scheduled service window is pretty tough. There is no process at all to handle repairs - or atleast that is the impression I got. There used to be QRS (Quick Repair Service) bay, which takes care of small running repairs - but if a strut develops problem at say 52000 KMs, then with the current model, i think the owner has to really struggle to get the struts changed or wait until 60K service. Hmm. Hmm!!

- Aravind Kamath Posral

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Inddie celebrates 2nd B'day!

March 8th, 2014 - Inddie completed two years and how! Inddie, has clocked 46300 KMs and was ferrying us from sullia to bangalore on March 8th. Inddie is going strong..Upcoming work - 50K KMs service and may be change the remaining two original tyres with brand new ones!

- Aravind Kamath Posral

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Some Pics from the Inddie's southern adventure..















Inddie's Southern Adventure..

Better late than never! So here goes the story of Inddie's southern adventure starting from 21st December to 26th December 2013. It all started in the month of October when I began feeling the need for a trip during the annual shutdown at our workplace. Initially the idea was to cover Kanyakumari, Rameshwaram, Tanjavoor, Thiruvananthapuram, kodaikanal and back to bangalore. However, little into route planning, the reality struck that it would be too tiresome and most of the time would go only on the roads rather than visiting places - especially, with my two esteemed co-travellers - My Dad and Mom. Quickly, the plan was changed to cover Bangalore - Kanyakumari - Trivandrum - Madurai - Kodaikanal - Palani - Bangalore.

Did not do much as part of the prep work for the car other than getting the regular 40K Service in november which i have already written about. Did not plan much of night driving, in fact, no night driving at all. Just a basic check of car fluids and air pressure including the spare tyre - that's it. Tanked up diesel the previous day.

So the when the day arrived - we got started on 21st Dec at around 7 AM from my house as against a planned 5:30 AM start. Well! well! Traffic snarls right from the end of the elevated express way. The two toll booths (Hosur and Krishnagiri) took 1 Hour put together to pay the toll and get out on the other side. We just kept going ignoring all the breakfast hotels - the Kamat, the A2B, the Saravana Bhavan..all of them! In each of these, you could see an ocean of cars parked - so I knew we did not stand a chance of coming out of that place before 1 hour. Kept driving till Thoppur toll, made a U turn, went to A2B. Hardly 15 cars were parked - what a relief! We reached there by 9:50 AM and after a hearty breakfast of dosas, left the place at around 10:30 AM. Covered distance pretty fast after this stop. Traffic got thicker near Salem. Waded completely after Namakkal. Held the Inddie below 80 as we approached Salem. Once past salem, let all the horses loose.. Was able to comfortably ride 120 KMPH. Crossed Madurai around 1:45 PM. Tanked up diesel in a place where i saw many private cars filling diesel..Inddie drank around 1200 Rs/- worth of diesel. We were not feeling hungry, so did not stop for lunch. Had a Kumbakonam Degree filter coffee at KDMC (if i remember it correctly) after madurai. Took a couple of stretch breaks. After Madurai, it felt that we were the only ones headed to Kanyakumari - absolutely no traffic on the highway! Oh Boy, we were so mistaken! Felt like half the world was already in Kanyakumari when we reached there :D. Reached Kanyakumar by 4:00 PM, Checked into the hotel and the Trip meter said 675 KMs.

Went out to the beach relaxed by the sea that evening. Had some good food at Hotel Saravana in Kanyakumari, the one near the temple. Went to bed early.

Woke up early next morning (Dec 22), started to Thiruvananthapuram by 6:30 AM. Frankly, nothing much to see in there - or atleast we did not plan to cover any of the places there except Lord Padmanabhaswamy temple, which was mother's to-do list for a long long time; even before the temple treasures news came in the public domain. So, distance wise it was only 90 KMs, but took around 2.5 Hours. There started the brush with the reality - the temple was too crowded with Ayyappa Swami devotees. It is a very bad season to visit any temple in south india during that time - the wisdom dawned after this trip though :) It was virtually impossible to even get to the cloak room. So I decided to be the cloak room for my parents, took my dad's shirt, mobile etc and sent both dad and mom inside. I prayed to the lord from outside only..We finished the visit, ate breakfast at a place called Arya Bhavan on the Kanyakumari road and drove down to Wooden Palace in Padmanabhapuram. Between Thiruvananthapuram and Padmanabhapuram, at one of the curves, an old lady decides to just run right across in front of my car. My car was at around 45-50 KMPH on the national highway. Just slammed the brakes on my car..No time to down shift..ABS light comes on in the dashboard. Steering is still responding thanks to ABS as wheels were not locked. I swerve left, avoid the collision with old lady, car stops and the old lady just walks past quickly! Phew! one heck of a lucky day! Thanked lord Padmanabhaswamy :) and continued with journey. ABS really saved the day for me and that old lady both! Especially for me, because in such situations things can go from bad to worse any time..you know the mob mentality that is prevalent here in India irrespective of whose fault it is!

Anyways, finished visiting the wooden palace, drove back to Kanyakumari, got some rest, went out to watch sunset near Gandhi mandapam. There was a sense of serenity amidst all the sea of humanity all around:). Ate some street junk food, came back to our hotel SivaMurugan, went to a good sea food dinner at Sea View hotel and crashed to bed. The car odo read 210 KMs for the day trip.

23rd Dec: Woke up early, visited the temple with special darshan tickets. Here too Ayyappa devotees rule the queues! Tough, very tough. Especially for aged people like my good ol' man! Anyways, finished darshan, went and stood in the long vivekanand ferry queue, visited vivekanand memorial, thiruvalluvar statue, and back to mainland. Checked out from the room and visited Chottavilai beach - was super good. Very clean, not many humans roaming there. It was very, very good. After half an hour to 45 mins, left the beach, drove towards Madurai. Reached madurai late afternoon. Filled diesel for 1000 Rs on the way to Madurai. Had booked a hotel online called Hotel Kathir palace, which is near the west gate of Meenakshi temple. This was one hell of a driving experience - narrow streets - cows - bullock carts - auto barging in from all directions - and top of that, a slow GPS software in my smartphone. Missed one right turn and then struggled like anything - entered narrow lanes where there was space barely enough for my inddie to navigate. The relief when I found the hotel is something that i still feel to this day! After profusely sweating and managing to reach this hotel, the A/C of this hotel was the only solace. I decided that i am not going to pull the car out of the parking lot of this hotel until check out, decided to use autos instead. Went to Meenakshi temple in the evening, again Ayappa devotees. Again the unmanageable crowd. Add to that security checking and two separate queues! Took the special darshan tickets, Meenakshi Amman darshan was smooth, lord Sundareshwara darshan was impossible with the kind of crowd who behaved as if lord is going to run away any moment from now! My parents were simply struggling to get on the ramp that leads to the sanctum sanctorium and not one person would allow our queue to merge at all. Finally, I think the lord himself took pity and one gentleman obliged and let my parents squeeze into the queue. I had blown all my wits by then and I made the decision on the spot to drop Palani from the tour list. I had enough of this mad rush and I could not take it anymore - not for me per se- but more so for my parents. Cannot see my parents go through this madness, I thought. Makes me wonder sometimes as to where the conscience is, in public life. What a stark contrast to me offering my seat to the old and needy to this day vis-a-vis this crowd. Phew. Out goes Palani from the trip. I call the hotel in Palani that evening to cancel, they say i lose the entire amount, I say ok. Simply could not digest more crowds in temple. Came to hotel, relaxed. My friend had told me not to miss Jigar Thanda, Murugan idli Kadai and Bell Hotel Jumbo Prawns. Saw Jigar Thanda and my jigar got thanda the moment i saw what is jigar thanda and decided not to go for it. I think it is for people who are not in the risk of being diabetic :D. But looked good I must say. Enjoyed bell hotel prawns.

24th Dec: I get a call from my friend Beni and he has also landed in madurai. What a pleasant surprise! He showed up with delicious Idiyappam. We had breakfast, spent some time chit chatting, and after that checked out. Started driving towards Kodaikanal, where I booked my stay in Sterling valley view resort. Took the kodai road, the road was good all the way. Inddie is a star - be it flat highways, hill roads, bad roads - he is the real mile cruncher. Inddie more than eager to gobble up KMS in the ghats once turbo opens up at 1750 RPM; there is no stopping Inddie! Reached there by 12:30 PM. Checked in. Gala Dinner was complusory. They sent us to buffet lunch which was absolutely avoidable. Relaxed for the rest of the day in the property. Booked a cab for 25th dec to show us around in Kodaikanal. Had gala dinner spiced up with dance music and other activities - me strictly from a audience perspective. Came back and crashed into my comfy bed.

Dec 25: Next morning, the sunrise was simply too awesome! One of the most memorable sunrise of my life time. Had buffet breakfast, hopped into the car and started sight seeing. Visited all the view points in kodai except guna caves as the walk up to the caves would be too much for my mother. Completed most other view points like pine forest, kurunji temple, view points, coakers walk, some garden, pillar rock, suicide point, moir point, lake, boating etc etc Came back in the evening. Relaxed at the resort.

Dec 26th: With Palani cancelled, the plan was to drive straight to Blr. Went to suicide point one more time, and then started to blr. It was 10:30 AM when we left Kodaikanal. Decided to drive back via kodai road and then NH7 only rather than take the dindigul road. It was a good decision. Reached NH 7 by 12:15. Started driving back. Filled diesel somewhere near salem. Stopped at the same A2B near thoppur toll plaza at 3:30 PM. Had good food. Reached electronic city by 5:45 PM and home by 6:45 PM.

Total distance travelled: 1735 KMs
Number of days: 6
Mileage: Dont know, did not calculate.

Each day passing, I am more convinced that Inddie is a great car! Inddie is a steady mile cruncher and is super comfy for long drives.

Will publish photos next..

- Aravind