I think you are confusing lumens and the light temperature.LED lights are great for many replacements, but I***8217;ve found them unsuitable for incandescent headlight replacements. ...
Oh ok, now that's a whole other issue, You're going to have to find a local seller that has one, or fab up a new set of lights (most of us has done that) even on our older non grey tractors as stock lights are pitiful or just too dang expensive!The bulb isn't the problem. The glass fell out, hence the need to replace the whole thing.
Nope. No confusion. I meant what I said.I think you are confusing lumens and the light temperature.
Typically you see the "blue" looking LED that are 6000K in color (very shadowy). If you want that incandescent "softness" get a 3000-3500K LED. Also there are a ton of "styles" of LED's (lenses and diode configurations) making it very hard to compare. For me, replacing the 1156's in my B2650 gave literally hundreds of choices in LED.
There is no contest now between lumen per watt - incandescent/LED, that ship sailed about 10 years ago and is getting further away every day.
Curious... Was the 13 amps a measured value or calculated based on the advertised rating of the LED lightbar?I installed a lightbar on top of my grill-guard which is very pleasing, but the OEM headlights only draw 8 Amps while the LightBar draws 13.). Sure makes the night brighter tho***8217;.
It is a measured value. (I have installed an ammeter on the panel of this tractor as a back-up to the idiot-light.)Curious... Was the 13 amps a measured value or calculated based on the advertised rating of the LED lightbar?