And not be as bright as it could be.Empty V wrote:If you replace any lamps with LEDs you want the lamp to be the same color as the reflector. If you try to use a "white" LED replacement in a housing that has a red lens/cover it will end up looking orange-ish.
I plan on changing all of my incandescent bulbs to LED's and the high-mounted stop light was the next to be converted. I'm curious as to why turning on the turn signals would deactivate the cruise control (I'm a recent CpE grad); would it just stop maintaining speed or would it turn the cruise control completely off?Chuck Tribolet wrote:
And not be as bright as it could be.
And a heads-up on a potential problem. I replaced all my brake lights with LEDsand after that, every time I hit the turn signal, the cruise control would shut off. The solution was to replace one bulb in the CHMSL with an incandescentbulb. (If you are an electrical engineer or an old-school (took the technicaltest) ham radio guy, I can give an explanation).
The 5 "High Power" LED's on the lamps I linked to are actually brighter then the stock halogen bulbs. The only issue is the orientation of the LED's on the wedge. Most of them are positioned at a slightly different rotation around the wedge base so there's a lack of uniformity. Even with that they look awesome! It's just a shame they're behind the car so I can't see them while driving.Chuck Tribolet wrote:And not be as bright as it could be.
There are appears to be a tiny bit of leakage current from the turn signals tothe brake lights. With incandescents, it just goes to ground. With LEDs, itgets held at the forward voltage drop of the LED, and that's enough for thecruise computer to think you hit the brakes, and stop maintaining speed.Pwnin O’Brien wrote:I plan on changing all of my incandescent bulbs to LED's and the high-mounted stop light was the next to be converted. I'm curious as to why turning on the turn signals would deactivate the cruise control (I'm a recent CpE grad); would it just stop maintaining speed or would it turn the cruise control completely off?
What if you just put a resistor in series with the high-mounted stop light?Chuck Tribolet wrote:There are appears to be a tiny bit of leakage current from the turn signals tothe brake lights. With incandescents, it just goes to ground. With LEDs, itgets held at the forward voltage drop of the LED, and that's enough for thecruise computer to think you hit the brakes, and stop maintaining speed.
I personally don't see any need to change anything but the brake lights toLED. The instant on of the LED is a safety advantage (incandescents take abouta tenth of second (that's about seven feet at freeway speeds) to turn on.
I'll try it out tonight and will report back. I've only converted the 3rd/high mount brake light though. I'm waiting for someone to release a 92 LED dual intensity for the reg brake lights in the 7443 socket.Pwnin O’Brien wrote:Indeed the ASCD does monitor the stop lamp circuit as well. So it seems the only way to prevent this issue is to use a resistor in parallel (besides using a standard incandescent bulb).
Has everybody else who has converted the high-mounted stop lamp to LED had the same issue?
As long has there's one incandescent light in the system, you won'tsee the cruise control problem. And you might not even then. Maybe it's uniqueto my truck.Empty V wrote:Well it didn't cut off my cruise control but I'm only running the 3rd brake light with LED's.
Roger I'll get some after pics up for you.
Billy