Sting-Gray Neutral Pres.
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Mar 14, 2021
- Threads
- 10
- Messages
- 153
- Reaction score
- 172
- Location
- Washington
- Vehicle(s)
- Jeep Gladiator Sport Diesel
- Thread starter
- #1
Hi there, I've got two questions:
1) Do cowl lights impact fuel economy? I'd guess no but aerodynamics can be a complex and counterintuitive thing and I'm hoping a fellow data nerd out there has measured the impact ?.
2) Recommendation for a good pencil (spot?) light with a yellow tint? Prefer an aerodynamic rather than recessed housing.
For those who like stories and details here's why I'm asking: I now live in a mountain town and frequently travel over some of the snowiest mountains in the US, in the winter, at night. The Jeep's headlights are an atrocious design for this, recessed buckets on a flat front that just collect snow no matter what, in conditions that are non-issues for most modern aerodynamic front ends. My setup is Oracle heated LED headlights and Diode Dynamic yellow fogs (mid-tier strength, supposed to get hot). Despite the heated element and hot fogs I had a couple drives last winter that were pretty unpleasant, including one memorable one where I had to pull over 7 times in just 30 miles to wipe clean the lenses of both the mains and the fogs (I have video if anyone is interested). I could even see where the heating elements were trying but failing to keep up. My thinking is that I'd like to have a cowl light because it would not be in a recessed housing and in different airflow and thus wouldn't accumulate snowpack. I'd also like it to be a pencil/spot to pierce through driving snow, and be able to turn off the headlights and just run spots and fogs in all yellow with great visibility.
1) Do cowl lights impact fuel economy? I'd guess no but aerodynamics can be a complex and counterintuitive thing and I'm hoping a fellow data nerd out there has measured the impact ?.
2) Recommendation for a good pencil (spot?) light with a yellow tint? Prefer an aerodynamic rather than recessed housing.
For those who like stories and details here's why I'm asking: I now live in a mountain town and frequently travel over some of the snowiest mountains in the US, in the winter, at night. The Jeep's headlights are an atrocious design for this, recessed buckets on a flat front that just collect snow no matter what, in conditions that are non-issues for most modern aerodynamic front ends. My setup is Oracle heated LED headlights and Diode Dynamic yellow fogs (mid-tier strength, supposed to get hot). Despite the heated element and hot fogs I had a couple drives last winter that were pretty unpleasant, including one memorable one where I had to pull over 7 times in just 30 miles to wipe clean the lenses of both the mains and the fogs (I have video if anyone is interested). I could even see where the heating elements were trying but failing to keep up. My thinking is that I'd like to have a cowl light because it would not be in a recessed housing and in different airflow and thus wouldn't accumulate snowpack. I'd also like it to be a pencil/spot to pierce through driving snow, and be able to turn off the headlights and just run spots and fogs in all yellow with great visibility.
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