I’ve been running the KUQIQI headlight units for about a season. They’ve hung in there for everything I’ve thrown at them (mostly bugs). Here are my observations:
CONS:
- Make sure you’ve got a ¼-20 tap on hand during installation, because odds are you’ll need to chase some threads. My unit didn’t have the mounting holes masked during paint. Caused a great deal of frustration for me.
- The upwards cutoff is sharp, which hurts a bit for seeing where you’re going when you’re doing sharp, low-speed turns in the dark. Guess that means I need to invest in some auxiliary lights, huh?
MIDDLE-GROUND:
- The light output of the lo-beam is bright, but I want it to be just a bit more. It’s usable, don’t be mistaken. Way better than the stock halogen units. I suppose that if I wanted the equivalent of a Harley Daymaker headlight, I should’ve ponied up the cash for one. I’d say it’s worth the $200 price tag.
PROS:
- Simple installation. After I got the threads chased, of course. Hah! Out with the old and in with the new. No problems with fitup.
- Hi-beam is DAZZLINGLY BRIGHT. Initially I was disappointed by the pattern of the hi-beam (it’s just a simple spot). But when I got on the street I was blown away by the laser beam they stuffed in this thing. Turning on the hi-beam is like turning on the sun.
- Halo-style daytime running lights look AWESOME. I know that there are mods that I could do to only have the DRLs on when I’m riding, but I’m not really at the point where I want to mess with that.
- I feel safer because I know I’m going to be seen.
FYI: You cannot run the stock headlight grille on the KUQIQI LED units. The aftermarket headlight housings are wider than OEM.