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HIDs the Correct way- How To

23K views 96 replies 29 participants last post by  yngbuck19 
#1 ·
Well after driving my truck close to a 1000 miles a couple weekends ago all at the dark of the day, I came to the conclusion my head lights really didn't cut it. They have had different bulbs in them and are starting to yellow. So I decided it was time to do what I have always wanted. A HID kit.

Now yes there is a proper way to do an HID kit and an improper way. The improper way takes a normal headlight and puts a cheap HID kit in it. The problem with any HID kit, is that when you put them in a non projector style housing, it creates a great amount of scattered light, and in the end basically wastes the output of an HID and blinds oncoming drivers.

The proper way to do it is to use a projector style head light. Right now there is nothing produced for our old trucks without getting a ricer style off ebay. So I decided to do some research and figure out how to do my own.

This is what I used

Headlight Housings
Projector/Ballasts/Bulbs/Harness


So I got the housings here at the house, and actually was very surprised by the quality.




Now was the time to take the lenses off the housings so I could put the projectors inside the housings. This took a lot more work than I expected, but after about an hour and putting them in and out of the oven I finally got them off. The main trick I learned towards the end was to leave them in longer. I was afraid I would melt the housings, but even at 275 degrees and 10 minutes there was no issues.





Now that the lenses are off, its time to put the retro fit projectors in.

First lets put the shrouds on the projectors, there are 4 screws to tighten them on. Not tough to do, but if forgotten to do, you gotta take the next steps apart to put back on.

Because these trucks come with a 9007 bulb stock, I got some of the 9007 adapters when I ordered the HID setup.

Without the Adapter

With the Adapter


The flat spot with the two ears on the top is the guide for the Projector to slide though and be properly aimed. The two ears on either side are for the wires to go through that are used for the shield solenoid or the High Beams.

The kit comes with a few pieces. I used the big silicone white washer right on the projector, then the projector was fed through the housing while aligning the wires, and then I put the lock nut on them. The wires seem to get in the way a bit, but if you kinda push them down and out of the way of the lock nut its not terrible to tighten up. I just used a pair of needle nose.

Here is what it looks like with the lock nut on.



After those are tight, you can screw the bulb holder back onto the projector.



Then the bulb can slide in.



Here is what the other side looks like.





So now that everything here is done. Time to put the harness for the high lows on, which is not hard at all, the wires just slide in, but you have to make sure the black goes to the black. The harness other wires are Blue and Red. The Projector wires are Red. So the Red goes to the red or Blue, and the Blacks go to the Blacks.

Final step is resealing the Housings. I bought the extra sealing glue to seal these back up. Take a strip of it and put it on the down the housing edges. Error on the out side of the housing (I did this on one, and the other I didn’t), otherwise you can see the glue on the inside.

Once the stripe of glue is on both housings, put them in oven at 265 degrees for 8 minutes. Once you take them off, make sure that the lenses are clean and not printed up, as well as the reflective part in the housing. Then take the lenses and press them on. Make sure they are nice and tight. Wait for the glue to cool down and trim down the excess glue.


This is what they look like now. Ready to go in the truck.






To take the header panel out of the truck. Take the grill out, there are 5 screws on top and one under the Ford Emblem. Next take the two screws out of the chrome trim piece around the head lights.

The trim piece is attached to the side marker and the lower housing. The lower housing then has 2 11 mm bolts hold it on that you have to take off from the back side of the radiator support.

Once those are out, you can take the bulbs out and you are left with the two head lights on the truck and the header panel The header panel has 11 8 mm bolts holding it on. Take them out and then take the header panel off the truck with the headlights.

I then took the stock headlights and matched the new headlights screws and everything, so that they would be close in alignment. Then I installed them into the header panel.

I had to find a place to mount the ballasts for the HIDs. I used the back of the header panel.





Now lets put the wiring harness in the truck.

12V source I put to the always hot side of the starter solenoid. The ground I found a place to put right near the passenger side battery. I ran the long wire segment to the drivers side in front of the radiator and A/C condenser. Then I brought the Header panel close and plugged everything in.

Thick black and red wires went to the ballasts. The Ballasts then were plugged into the bulbs. The high beam setup was blue and black. The projectors had the red and black. The red goes to the 12Vs (blue wire) and the ground goes to the blue.
Now the part that hooks to the input, is originally wired for a 9004 bulb. So the wiring there needs to change.




Simple swap. Now time to test and see if everything is working.



Now its time to reassemble. And do a final aiming of them. 25 feet out, the cutoff line from the projector should be 1-2 inches lower than the point they are on the truck.

Finished product!




Very nice to drive with! I will try and get some pictures of the new light output
 
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#6 ·
Around here ricers are always putting HID's in projector housings that are blinding.
Most that I have seen are painted black so the light doesn't scatter so badly.
I've never seen a set "properly" installed, but you've peaked my interest since I've got a new set of headlights sitting here waiting to be installed.
I might just have to give this a whirl.
 
#7 ·
To do it correctly, it does cost some money.

280 bucks shipped for the kit from http://www.theretrofirsource.com

I had 109 bucks in the housings shipped, and 19 for all the replacement bulbs )replaced the good ones, figured since i was in there might aswell.

so I have 408 bucks in this setup.
 
#9 ·
extremely good write-up, thankyou very much .... will be doing this to mine one of these days, and am going to copy-paste this whole thing onto a text editor and save it...thanks again
 
#22 ·
very cool setup you won my vote when i put my truck back together and order new headlights this is what i want to do
 
#24 ·
#26 ·
I just did the exact same set up, didn't see this thread! This would have been helpfull. In went off superkaurt bronco build on hid planet! Great write up, after dealing with the trs harness i love the set up
 
#30 ·
I hate the looks of those, and yes as matt said those are a halogen bulb, and the projectors listed above from TRS are true bi-xenon giving you that nice cut off line so you dont blind on comming drivers, and a true high beam.
My buddy melted his ebay projectors in his ranger with a xenon bulb. Looks like an egg now.
 
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