Headlight wiring FRIED

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brains9110
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Headlight wiring FRIED

Post by brains9110 »

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Had my Voyager about 2 weeks now and decided to change the headlight. Looks like my headlight wiring harness socket is FRIED!!!! Is this a standard H4 9003 ceramic wiring harness sockets? I have to figure out how to replace this!
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Re: Headlight wiring FRIED

Post by Furchin »

Most auto parts stores have this H4 socket in stock with short pig tail wires. If going this route the only option is to cut and splice the new one in place. While you are in there check the wattage of the H4 bulb and make sure it is not too high. 60/55 is standard , but if your wattage is too high you get the melted harness like you have now.
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SgtSlag
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Re: Headlight wiring FRIED

Post by SgtSlag »

As an alternative, take a look at this LED H4 replacement: 6000K 40W CREE XM-L2 LED H4/9003/HB2 Car Motorcycle Headlight Bulb w/ Heat Dissipation Belt Kit, 6,000 K (pure white), 40 Watts on Hi Beam, 50,000 hours MTBF, and it only costs $27, on Amazon.com... I plan on picking one up next Spring, if not sooner. Cheers!
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Mr Jensee
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Re: Headlight wiring FRIED

Post by Mr Jensee »

Sargent, let me know how it works. I have a Silver Star bulb in mine now but would like something even brighter without the fear of frying my wiring.
For Voyager XII Manuals click the link below.
https://1drv.ms/f/s!Ao3K0Ai2gvglgS3l7J4pBJrjfBhc
brains9110
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Re: Headlight wiring FRIED

Post by brains9110 »

Thanks guys!!! I actually purchased that exact LED bulb which is what resulted in my finding this problem. I purchased a new H4 socket today and hopefully will have it all back together with the new LED bulb by this evening. Thank you all for your help!!!
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Re: Headlight wiring FRIED

Post by timmerz_1 »

Just a tad confused here...our standard lighting is 60/55, and this LED bulb is 40w on high beam? Is it as bright at 40w as the standard bulb at 60w?
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Re: Headlight wiring FRIED

Post by SgtSlag »

No... It is MUCH brighter!!! A standard halogen bulb puts out around 1,000 Lumens on Hi. This LED pumps out 3,000 Lumens!

LED's are incredibly efficient compared to filament bulbs. They emit many more Lumens of light, per Watt of electricity, than tungsten bulbs will ever achieve. They usually generate much less heat, also. They are immune to vibrations as there is no filament to break. They typically last 50,000 hours, where filament bulbs last 7,000 hours, typically. That translates to around 20 years on our bikes! Maybe longer... Cheers!
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