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The led doesn't show that much more bright. Only more blue. Most pictures in internet show the led as 5 times as bright. What is the experience when you see it live?
Headlights have traditionally illuminated the road with a "color" that is perceived as yellow-white. In the last ten years or so we have seen headlights introduced that produce light that is perceived as blue-white (or purple-white in some cars). IMHO this move to "blue" has the potential to increase problems with contrast sensitivity/discrimination, thus making it harder to "see the road" at night. This can make it very difficult to perceive the difference between an old "grayed-out" road surface, the shoulder, and a caliche area off of the shoulder of the road. This is especially true if edge-of-the-road markings are "washed out" or missing.
Yes, it's bluer. I don't like that, but there's no 'warmer' choice right now. This shade of blue sits right on the edge of annoying color abberations -- reds going to purple and yellows to green, etc.
I just want to say that being on the receiving end of the blue-ish lights at night is a real irritation.
Adding LED to light assemblies that aren't designed for them is a half baked kludge. The reflectors won't work well and you end up with a very bright light as opposed to a lot of illumination down road. They are great for visibility in the others can see you but you really gain little to no benefit unless the entire assembly is purpose built. It is like adding a loud exhaust and thinking the noise is more power.
Bill, why do you feel that changing the color of the light from yellow-biased to white, for example, reduces contrast perception? I don't see that in RK's photos, and I haven't noticed it when riding at night with my LED headlight, which emits a very white light. I'm not saying you're not correct, I'm just wondering what you base this on.
Jim, my comments were about headlights that have a blue quality to them. "True" white (full spectrum light) is ideal for perceiving contrast.