While you are correct in premis, I live in a rural area in North Idaho with considerable fog, and heavy snow. I have never had a time my low beams did not work well in lighting the road in front of me, which includes the fog lights. High beams can, though that is because their light is directed higher. Regardless, here, more of the issue is animals, so having very bright flood lights extend to the sides and give a litle extra distance offering more time to see the animals earlier, and/or further off the shoulder. All LEDs per their engineering are extremely bright when considering your point, but when placed low, they do not interfere. This is a similar effect in photography, dramatically emphasized underwater where the strobes are moved to the side, or above your direct line of vision so they hit the particles at a different angle so that your eye does not see it. Either way, if this is still an issue in your mind, then move to yellow. You will note they are still as bright, just a different color. Science...
Unfortunately, I didn’t include any comparable Auxito fog lights. They seem to have a lot of positive reviews on Amazon as well and would be good to compare against the lasfits in the future.
Any concern with running an LED that has a fan in the fog housing? I'm assuming your Jeep doesn't have a dust cover for the fog like there is for the low beams.
There is no dust cover for my fog lights so you are correct that the fans would be exposed to the elements. If you did a lot of off roading that could definitely shorten the lifespan of the bulbs. But based on experience, before I did this test I had an older model lasfit fog light set that also had fans on them and they lasted 3 years before one went out. So to me their lifespan is on par with regular bulbs without the fans. I’ve also tried out some led headlights that have had built in fans and those are behind a dust cover and didn’t have issues with them besides brightness. But for fog lights these are worth it to me even if I have to replace them every 3+ years. Hope this helps.
Actually it is. Lumens is just the measurement of brightness, the measurement of light creating by the light source. Lux is the actual, usable, measurable brightness, at a certain distance, at a certain point in space. Candela is the measurement of brightness, at a certain places.
No led bulb will ever make 66,000 lumens. Major bogus and purely a lie. If it’s a 30W per bulb, like the Lasfit - LA plus, it’s 3000 lumens per bulb. If it’s a 65W per bulb, it’s 6500 lumens per bulbs Those type of lumens is on the led light bar territory.
This was a pointless test. All these bulbs were junk. I would recommend against using any of these as there's no cut off and just puts lights everywhere and is just going to blind everyone and look like crap in fog. Don't cheap out and get a quality light🤦🤷.
@@chekoeldisenadorwatch headlight revolution they have quite a few comparison videos with cheap and more expensive headlights. I have a set of auxbeam F16 led in my truck and they have a small set screw to fine tune how it sits in your housing and I ended up with a beam pattern identical to the stock halogens.
If you need a new set of fog lights I definitely recommend this brand.
Lasfit Led Fog Lights
amzn.to/3XLMhi7
I agree. Lasfit have been great. Also Auxito have been another go to for me as well
Thanks for going out and buying each of them so I didn't have to! Nice Review! I can't wait to purchase mine.
Yeah man, swapped both my current vehicles out to lasfit high low and fogs and never looked back.. good products for sure.
Did what you said and got the lasfit. Woah, they are super bright fogs!
Nice review !! With actual data.
If the fog lights are too bright, the light will reflect back to you so it will defeat the point purpose of having fog lights.
While you are correct in premis, I live in a rural area in North Idaho with considerable fog, and heavy snow. I have never had a time my low beams did not work well in lighting the road in front of me, which includes the fog lights. High beams can, though that is because their light is directed higher. Regardless, here, more of the issue is animals, so having very bright flood lights extend to the sides and give a litle extra distance offering more time to see the animals earlier, and/or further off the shoulder. All LEDs per their engineering are extremely bright when considering your point, but when placed low, they do not interfere. This is a similar effect in photography, dramatically emphasized underwater where the strobes are moved to the side, or above your direct line of vision so they hit the particles at a different angle so that your eye does not see it. Either way, if this is still an issue in your mind, then move to yellow. You will note they are still as bright, just a different color. Science...
Have you ever tried the Auxito i9 series?
Unfortunately, I didn’t include any comparable Auxito fog lights. They seem to have a lot of positive reviews on Amazon as well and would be good to compare against the lasfits in the future.
Any concern with running an LED that has a fan in the fog housing? I'm assuming your Jeep doesn't have a dust cover for the fog like there is for the low beams.
There is no dust cover for my fog lights so you are correct that the fans would be exposed to the elements. If you did a lot of off roading that could definitely shorten the lifespan of the bulbs. But based on experience, before I did this test I had an older model lasfit fog light set that also had fans on them and they lasted 3 years before one went out. So to me their lifespan is on par with regular bulbs without the fans. I’ve also tried out some led headlights that have had built in fans and those are behind a dust cover and didn’t have issues with them besides brightness. But for fog lights these are worth it to me even if I have to replace them every 3+ years. Hope this helps.
Does the lasfit leds have a fan to dicipate heat output?
Yes the lasfit bulbs do have built in cooling fans.
Lumens are a measurement of light output, not brightness. Candela and lux are more telling.
Actually it is.
Lumens is just the measurement of brightness, the measurement of light creating by the light source.
Lux is the actual, usable, measurable brightness, at a certain distance, at a certain point in space.
Candela is the measurement of brightness, at a certain places.
So yellow is better lol
Depends on where u live and how the weather is.
For crystal clear night, white is better.
@@toyotabrony yeah I use 6k clear led for hi low and yellow/white two tone for fogs
@@KE8ODY-WV-Ares-Ham-Dad-3O4 nice. A switchback fog lights is the best for both worlds of night and weather 🤟🏼
Is it Lasfit as well?
Rodriguez Paul Martin Melissa Walker Anthony
I don’t even care about my fog lights serving their actual purpose, my HID low beams just suck ass
If it’s a D2S, switch to led that’s brighter and more control
Sea light 66000
No led bulb will ever make 66,000 lumens. Major bogus and purely a lie.
If it’s a 30W per bulb, like the Lasfit - LA plus, it’s 3000 lumens per bulb. If it’s a 65W per bulb, it’s 6500 lumens per bulbs
Those type of lumens is on the led light bar territory.
This was a pointless test. All these bulbs were junk. I would recommend against using any of these as there's no cut off and just puts lights everywhere and is just going to blind everyone and look like crap in fog. Don't cheap out and get a quality light🤦🤷.
So what’s a quality bulb?
Please, could you name a quality pair of foglights to change mine?
Then tell me which one you recommend and also do you have a test to prove they are the real deal...
?
@@chekoeldisenadorwatch headlight revolution they have quite a few comparison videos with cheap and more expensive headlights. I have a set of auxbeam F16 led in my truck and they have a small set screw to fine tune how it sits in your housing and I ended up with a beam pattern identical to the stock halogens.
Do you have a light you recommend or just wanted to sound like you knew something?
Exactly, a lot of reviews because it’s cheap