I had a set of rear lights that had all the reflectors dull up and corrode with exposure to the air from a cracked lens. So I decided to do a LED conversion and see how it worked out. here is the photo story
Cut out the lens with a hot knife
cut me some copper bars
then some soldering
some shiny aluminum tape
rubbed with some metal polish
secured in the shiny lens
Polished rear lens and all back together
Wow baby look at the light!!
they work amazingly well
Rear light LED conversion DIY
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Re: Rear light LED conversion DIY
Nice job!
What you have to be careful of is that your running light is not too bright. Normally the brake light (and turn signal) is 4x brighter than the running light. If the running light is too bright it will bother other motorists, and it will also make the brake light hard to notice, as there is already a bright light lit next to it.
Some new cars have the turn signal inside a round brake light, and it is virtually impossible to see the turn signal when the brake lights are on.
What you have to be careful of is that your running light is not too bright. Normally the brake light (and turn signal) is 4x brighter than the running light. If the running light is too bright it will bother other motorists, and it will also make the brake light hard to notice, as there is already a bright light lit next to it.
Some new cars have the turn signal inside a round brake light, and it is virtually impossible to see the turn signal when the brake lights are on.
Csaba
'71 124 Spider, much modified
'17 124 Abarth, silver
http://italiancarclub.com/csaba/
Co-owner of the best dang Fiat parts place in town
'71 124 Spider, much modified
'17 124 Abarth, silver
http://italiancarclub.com/csaba/
Co-owner of the best dang Fiat parts place in town
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Re: Rear light LED conversion DIY
Good stuff!
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Re: Rear light LED conversion DIY
Very good!
Speaking of safety, I added a third brake light that clips to the forward lip of the trunk lid. Glued a very thin led marker light to a short segment of rubber edge molding, it is very indiscrete.
It can be removed and tucked into the trunk in a moment, for photos , meets and such.
I think its saved my butt a few times already.
Speaking of safety, I added a third brake light that clips to the forward lip of the trunk lid. Glued a very thin led marker light to a short segment of rubber edge molding, it is very indiscrete.
It can be removed and tucked into the trunk in a moment, for photos , meets and such.
I think its saved my butt a few times already.
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- Coolbreeze
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- Your car is a: 1980 Fiat Spider 2000
Re: Rear light LED conversion DIY
Thank you for your illuminating post. Is there a downside to replacing a rear turn signal bulb (1073, I believe) with an LED substitute? I see that substitutes may be purchased at: https://www.superbrightleds.com/vehicle ... &year=1980
I am concerned that the LED device will not draw enough current to cause the flasher unit to work.
I am concerned that the LED device will not draw enough current to cause the flasher unit to work.
George Tinkham
1980 Fiat Spider 2000
1984 Moto Guzzi V65Sp
1964 BMW R69S
1956 Harley-Davidson KHK
1948 Indian Chief
1980 Fiat Spider 2000
1984 Moto Guzzi V65Sp
1964 BMW R69S
1956 Harley-Davidson KHK
1948 Indian Chief
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Re: Rear light LED conversion DIY
There is. They completely suck.Coolbreeze wrote:Thank you for your illuminating post. Is there a downside to replacing a rear turn signal bulb (1073, I believe) with an LED substitute? I see that substitutes may be purchased at: https://www.superbrightleds.com/vehicle ... &year=1980
I am concerned that the LED device will not draw enough current to cause the flasher unit to work.
We did this on our school bus (turn, running and brake lights). Immediately took them back to the store, they were awful. How they are allowed to sell those is beyond me.
Opted to replace the entire light assembly with a DOT-Approved LED version. Anything else and you are asking for trouble.
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Re: Rear light LED conversion DIY
Hi Coolbreeze
As long as you have one incandescent light in the indicator circuit, you should not need a resistor inline to operate the flasher unit with any led's.
if you are running all led's, you will need to change the flasher unit to an electronic one and a resistor inline for each circuit (2)
As long as you have one incandescent light in the indicator circuit, you should not need a resistor inline to operate the flasher unit with any led's.
if you are running all led's, you will need to change the flasher unit to an electronic one and a resistor inline for each circuit (2)
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Re: Rear light LED conversion DIY
This is just my opinion:Is there a downside to replacing a rear turn signal bulb
I the lens for car lights are designed to work with either incandescent or LED type bulbs. Incandescent bulbs radiate light in all directions and the light is carried by the lens material making the entire lens illuminate. LED light is more directional or straight line. I think that is one of the reasons modern cars with LED tail lights use numerous LED's to make up one assembly and if the light is to be seen from more than one angle the LED's will be installed accordingly.
Simply replacing an incandescent bulb with an LED bulb might increase the visibility directly behind the car but not as much from the sides. Some LED replacement bulbs are comprised multiple LED's at different angles making the light pattern more like an incandescent. I believe the LED light ray passes through t he lens with out illuminating it thus making the LED replacement brighter in some angles and less visible from other angles.
Again I am not a light engineer and this is my observation/opinion
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Re: Rear light LED conversion DIY
I love how nobody cares about the legality of any of this.
Don't modify your lights, unless the new components are DOT Approved or you have a trust fund specifically for when people sue your pants off after they rear-ended you because they couldn't see. Especially in a low, two brake light car like a Fiat 124 that's already invisible by modern standards, this is asking for trouble.
Go ahead and switch to LED turn signals. Nobody will be able to see you use them, but hey at least you won't have to swap bulbs as often
Don't modify your lights, unless the new components are DOT Approved or you have a trust fund specifically for when people sue your pants off after they rear-ended you because they couldn't see. Especially in a low, two brake light car like a Fiat 124 that's already invisible by modern standards, this is asking for trouble.
Go ahead and switch to LED turn signals. Nobody will be able to see you use them, but hey at least you won't have to swap bulbs as often