Friday, June 18, 2010

Hyundai i10 Headlight Bulb Upgrade - Sealing The Cap!

I just sealed the holes in the cap, i used Anabond 666 RTV sealant which is actually a silicone gasket material which i have extensively used in my motorcycle DIY days. I bought the Anabond white RTV silicone sealant and smeared it over the hole and the wires. It sets in couple of hours to form a thick but flexible seal. It should hold good. Sorry for the poor pics, i used my cell phone cam with a torchlight for a flash ;-)

This is the hole before applying the silicone sealant.

Hole after applying the sealant.




Again had to pull out the head lamp unit to do this thing. I fixed the headlamps back and switched on the light, only to find that left headlamp is emitting a feeble glow, i was wondering what went wrong when suddenly it struck me that i must not have tightened the bolt where the ground wire is clamped. Opened the hood and yes i thought right!, i forgot to tighten the ground bolt (i had loosened it to take out the lamp), i tightened it and now all is well!

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Hyundai i10 Headlight Bulb Upgrade - Done!

Decided to have a go at the stupid headlamps once again and finally did it!! The i10 now runs with 3400 lumen each at high beam provided by Hella 90/130 bulbs.

Now you might think why i chose 90/130 instead of the more obvious choice, which is Philips 100/130. The reason is 90W low beam is more than enough for my needs, i would be running on low beam for most of the time and 90W is definitely less damaging than a 100W low beam in the long run, plus i save 20W energy and there is no free energy. The130W high beams gives me the lumen when i need it!



The Hyundai manual is wrong, it says to remove the headlamps you need to undo two bolts, actually there are three bolts to be undone, one the missing bolt in the manual sits just behind the indicator bulb.
So i undid the three bolts and this time armed with more information from couple of posts at Hyundai Forums, i yanked out the headlamp in a side to side rocking motion. It finally came out after a lot of struggle. So what holds the headlamps is three bolts, clip on the bottom of the lamp and couple of legs on the outer side of the lamp unit.
As i said before the power is provided to the whole headlamp unit by a single connector. There is no separate external connection to the headlamp bulb. But what you have is a short stubby wire that runs inside of the lamp unit and connects to the bulb.

There is a cap behind the headlamp bulb, to keep out mud and dust. Believe me the wheels will splash the back of the lamp unit with mud and water through the gap in the fender apron. So you don't want to leave any holes on that cap! But without making a hole, either on the cap or on the lamp unit itself, there is no what that you can use a ceramic/Bakelite holder! So hole should be made. One hole on the right side lamp unit, and two on the left lamp unit. Why two on left? One for the ceramic holder wires to pass through, and one for the stock headlamp connector wire to pass through and mate with the plug from relay kit, i didn't want both high draw wires to run together with the low draw wire. Don't make the hole larger than you need to make the wires to pass through.
To make the ceramic headlamp connector pass through the tiny hole, you need to separate the ceramic part from the clips. There is a tiny tab which locks the clip in place inside the ceramic holder. You need to press that clip and pull out the wire. After you have pulled out all three wires, pass it through the hole in the cap and put it back into the ceramic holder. Now that cap stays on the wire, it won't come off.

Now you change the headlamp bulbs, put in your favourite high wattage blinder, and place it in the head lamp's cavity on the car, but don't push it all the way in!

Now is the time to connect the relay plug to stock headlamp bulb connector. (You need to do what you have done on ceramic holder to separate the wire from plug and pass it through the second hole in the cap and connect it to the OE connector, you need not use the plug, just put it in the correct order). After that you connect the ceramic holder onto the bulb, and fix the cap back onto the headlamp unit. Like this you do the other lamp, but you need to do the relay connector thingy only on the left (car's left) lamp unit. (Why only on the left? Because battery is on that side so you place the relay there, and so you connect the relay plug on that side lamp unit. If the battery is on the right (car's right) you do it there).


There is a black wire than comes out of the ceramic holder, it goes nowhere, you have to ground it! Now earth both wires from each on a bolt that goes into car body metal. Connect the power wire from the relay to the battery's +ve terminal. Connect the negative terminal back on to the battery. Check for smoke :-D No smoke is all fine.

IMPORTANT: BEFORE STARTING TO WORK ON ELECTRICS DISCONNECT ALL LEADS FROM THE NEGATIVE TERMINAL OF THE BATTERY. ELSE RISK A FIRE AND/OR SEVERE BURN INJURY!!!

Now you turn on the headlamps, check high beam, low beam, indicators etc. If all works fine you may now install the lamp units properly.

If your headlamp beam is 'ulta' ie., high on low and low on high, you need to swap out wires of the relay connector going into the OE connector. Its easy, when you look at a headlamp connector from the back (that is you can see the wires coming out), left is the ground, and top and right are for high and low beams. If your beams are 'ulta' you need to change the top and right wires. Do this at the relay connector instead of doing it on each headlamps.

Now you turn on the headlamps, check high beam, low beam, indicators etc. If all works fine you may now install the lamp units properly.



Put the bolts back on clean up the wiring and you're good to go. The picture below is before i did tuck and tidy job :-)

BTW i didn't say anything about sealing the holes in the cap, did i? No i didn't. I did not seal it since i didn't have the right material. But I'm going to get some RTV silicone sealant and do it up. Why RTV

That's it!!

Now enjoy your night drives, use your high beams responsibly, use only low beams inside city or in well lit areas. Dip your high beams for oncoming traffic. Have a safe drive!!

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Hyundai i10 Headlight Bulb Upgrade - How ?

I peeked under the hood of my i10 and realised that there is no direct connection to the back of the headlamp bulb. I saw that headlamp power connector which plugs into a special socket on the headlamp and then another lead running inside the lamp assy connects to the bulb. If you look at the headlamp assy, you can see that there is a cap at the back of the headlamp bulb. So my guess is that connecting a traditional headlamp socket is not an easy thing to do here.