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HIDs

Posted: Sun May 27, 2007 10:54 pm
by simon
According to a thread on pistonheads, these are now illegal:
Pistonheads thread wrote: December 2006

Aftermarket HID headlamps

In the Department's view it is not legal to sell or use after market HID lighting kits, for converting conventional Halogen headlamps to HID Xenon. If a customer wants to convert his vehicle to Xenon HID he must purchase completely new Xenon HID headlamps. The reason for this is that the existing lens and reflector are designed around a Halogen filament bulb, working to very precise tolerances. If one places a HID "burner" (bulb) in the headlamp, the beam pattern will not be correct, there will be glare in some places and not enough light in other places within the beam pattern.

The following is the legal rationale:

The Road Vehicle Lighting Regulations 1989 regulate the situation in the UK.
Under these Regulations, HID/Gas Discharge/Xenon headlamps are not mentioned and therefore they are not permitted according to the strict letter of the law.

However new vehicles have HID headlamps. This is because they comply to European type approval Regulations. The UK cannot refuse to register a vehicle with a European type approval. These are to ECE Regulation 98 (for the HID headlamps which are tested on a rig in a laboratory) and ECE Regulation 48 (Lighting Installation on the vehicle).

For the after market, a used vehicle cannot obtain type approval because it is only applicable for new vehicles. However we feel that saying "HID is banned in the after market" would not be reasonable. Instead we should make analogies with new vehicles. It would be reasonable to require HID in the after market to meet the same safety standards as on new vehicles. The same level of safety should apply.

Therefore a HID headlamp unit sold in the after market should:

1. be type approved to ECE Regulation 98 as a component.

2. when fitted to the vehicle should enable ECE Regulation 48 to be complied with (although no government inspection will take place).

3. Comply with RVLR as far as "use" is concerned.
In practice this means:

1. The headlamp unit (outer lens, reflector, bulb) shall be type approved to ECE 98 and be "e-marked" to demonstrate this. That can only be done by the headlamp supplier - Hella, Valeo etc. who must test the headlamp in an independent laboratory.

2. Once fitted to the vehicle it must have headlamp cleaning and self-levelling (which can be for the headlamp or can be in the vehicle suspension - some expensive estate cars have "self-levelling suspension" and that is adequate). Also the dipped beam must stay on with the main beam.

3. The headlamp must be maintained in good working order, kept clean, and aligned/adjusted correctly like any other headlamp.

Under the Road Traffic Act 1988 it is an offence to supply, fit or use vehicle parts which are not legal.

In summary it is not permitted to convert an existing halogen headlamp unit for use with HID bulbs. The entire headlamp unit must be replaced with one designed and approved for use with HID bulbs and it must be installed in accordance with the rules stated above.


If you require any further information regarding the regulations covered by this fact sheet, please contact the DfT at the address below:

Transport Technology and Standards 6
Department for Transport
Zone 2/04
Great Minster House
76 Marsham Street Telephone: 020 7944 2078
London Fax: 020 7944 2196
SW1P 4DR Email: TTS.enquiries@dft.gsi.gov.uk

Posted: Sun May 27, 2007 11:04 pm
by Mr Momo
mmm

What now ?

Posted: Sun May 27, 2007 11:13 pm
by simon
Ignore it :thumbsup

If it fails an MOT, just swap back to the old bulbs, it's a quick job to do.

Posted: Mon May 28, 2007 12:00 am
by tut
And whilst your average cop is tripping over his flat feet whilst measuring your numberplate, tis hardly likely that he would spot that you were using illegal HID's.

And if he did, it would mean immediate promotion to Inspector, which would mean one less on the beat.

On the beat? Those were the days. Of course what I meant was sitting on his fat ass in his Volvo Patrol car, aiming his Radar Gun through the windscreen at some innocent Elise driver in a hurry, when he should be standing outside and clear of it, and we are just thankful that it is only a Radar Gun that they have given him............

tut

Posted: Mon May 28, 2007 8:42 am
by Kelvin
Presumably it could be an MOT failure though?

Posted: Mon May 28, 2007 9:06 am
by Stephen
the self levelling requirement is the key to the problem. HID lamps are much brighter.

Posted: Mon May 28, 2007 3:03 pm
by albutch
Mine passed an MOT OK.


Would need a lot of self-levelling on a hump back bridge :lol:

Posted: Tue May 29, 2007 10:41 am
by Shug
I'll not point out that Hambo raised this a few months ago then....

http://www.scottishelises.com/phpbb/vie ... php?t=6653

:roll: :lol:

Posted: Tue May 29, 2007 10:55 am
by Rich H
:lol:
They'll be checking my bulbs for CE marks next.... :oops: :roll:

Posted: Tue May 29, 2007 7:09 pm
by YvoTuk
Stephen wrote:the self levelling requirement is the key to the problem. HID lamps are much brighter.
Not in the Elise it isn't :)

The little max. 50kg in the boot sticker is the reason why Lotus got away delivering a car without manual adjusters. As the rake of the car should not change because of the static load of the car (e.g. no heavy objects in the boot) there's no need for level adjusters :)

Interesting thread going on here aswell:
http://forums.seloc.org/viewthread.php?tid=121567