Anyone tried these?

A Little Background

Paul

I do not drive that much at night so I never felt the need to use these but...I can say the photos accurately portray the before and after results.

These bulbs are made by a long time Tiger guy (and engineer by profession) here on the "right coast." He is an officer in TE/AE and a contributing author on the Tiger United Site. Originally made for Sunbeams, he has expanded production to other british marques.

I have seen his mock up of gauges lit by original and LED bulbs...the difference is significant.
 
Have some

In my car but not sure if they came from the Right Coast gent. In the vintage motorcycle world they are hailed as a way to get the battery to actually charge while the lights are on. I bet the same could be said for a generator equipped car even tho I believe they are rated 30 amps.
You should mention you East coast brother by name and not worry about the not affiliated tag.:cool:
 
Just in time for Christmas! Makes great stocking stuffer!:p
Just sayin'...
-Kevin
 
Background Paint

I wonder if they could get a yellow tinged light ... Brighter us better but l like the warm glow of the incandescent bulbs. A yellow tinge would give that

The inside of several of my instrument cases were tinted a robin's egg blue. I suspect that playing around with different tints (nail polish, anyone?) would yield personal taste results.
 
I don't drive my pine at night eatiher, or at least not very often, but the gauges are soooo dim, it's hard to even read them. I think I will buy a batch for the Alpine and see how I like them. If they are "all that", I'll buy a set for the Tig.

P
 
I have tried the LED's and agree with Michael King, until these lamps come in different colors, I am out. LED lamps for home use from companies like Philips are available in different Kelvins rating now that denote color, 2700K is warm white, 3000K is soft white, 4000K with daylight which is bluish. The instrument LED lamps available today are probably about 4000-5000K which is too blue for me to look natural in a 50 year old car.

I tested LED's in a Tiger speedo and a gauge that was cleaned up and repainted white inside with new 1446 incandescent lamps and have attached a picture here. I also repainted a can in various colors to try and color correct for the LED's blueish light and here are my opinions.

The most natural but most labor intensive solution is to take the gauges apart, repaint the inside cans gloss white and use 1446 incandescent lamps. The gauges are easy to read and look correct.

LED's are the easiest fix but you need to be OK with the color. They are also not really any brighter than a gauge that has been re-painted and re-lamped incandescent. Changing the inside can color does not fix the color issue.

When instrument lamps are available with a kelvin rating of 2700K-3000K and are dim able, your will have adequate light, color correctness and the ability to use the middle position on your gauge switch to dim then down.
 
Regardless of all that, I went ahead and ordered a set for my alpine today. I had a great conversation about Tigers and Sunbeams and found out he is just a heck of a nice guy. His bulbs are in use in many many British cars.
I am willing to give them a shot given the amount of night driving i do. Maybe when they start having night concourse events, I'll change my mind.

CAT DISCOUNT!

**************************************************************

Paul,
As I mentioned I'd be happy to extend my club discount to the CAT members. Just order from my website:

http://velocesolutionsllc.com

When you get to the order summary page, there will be a Coupon Field. Just enter the code:

CAT-discount

which will apply a 20% discount.

Joseph V. Parlanti
16048 Copen Meadow Dr
North Potomac, Md. 20878
Cell - 410-599-5475
Email - jvparlanti@gmail.com
http://veloces
 
I've had the dash lights for about a year & they are GREAT! The difference is so big that even my WIFE noticed! Several people said that it looks like a modern dash that you can actually see!

Then I went for Joe's tag-lights. Anything to brighten up the rear of the car at night. They looked great! A freak thing was that the factory grommet passing through the rear roll pan allowed the wire to short out & toast the LED's. When I asked Joe for a new pair to replace them, Joe sent the replacements for FREE! Joe, also restores our steeering wheels....
 
Back
Top