Stu, let us know the cost and how to do it and maybe. I do like your lights on your car.
Okay, so here is an idea: mount the rear lights around the edges of the rear, like McLaren styled the rear lights of the P1 (below).Right across the engine bay vents....not bad looking but will have some serious side effects. . . the how "swappable" the . . . 2012 Dodge Charger . . . tail lights would/could be onto the SLC.
That looks good! What do those lights go for?
I got my single corvette taillight today. I put it up to the car and it will work. I am going to need to do a bunch of molding and shaping to make it look good and flow with the body, but hat is the fun part for me. I am excited to having this cool looking tail light on my car. I also got the altima headlights fling did so I will have those also.
Okay, so here is an idea: mount the rear lights around the edges of the rear, like McLaren styled the rear lights of the P1 (below).
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This is exactly the inspiration on the tail lights I have been working on. I'm following the outline of the tail light opening, trying to open up more cooling vents. I'm using acrylic rod which has been heated up and formed to shape. Cam, if you were interested in illuminating acrylic rod as a DRL, you would need to score the back side of the rod with a Dremel or something to give it something to reflect off of. But I don't think it will give the desired effect during the day. For my tail lights, I have 5 (red) LEDS on each end to illuminate as driving lights, ten total. They don't light up as brightly as Scott's strip lights appear to. And I bought 65,000 mcd LEDs from Digikey. The brightest I could find at RadioShack is 3000 mcd, which incidentally were MUCH more expensive.
This has been a work in progress with many lessons learned on how to do it better. In many aspects.
This was the original design intent:
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After drilling the holes for the red LEDs, I realized I could integrate everything into one rod around the perimeter and not have to separate the turn signals and reverse light as pictured above. This picture below is just the red LEDs. There's room for amber and clear. Yay!
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I started with a round cross section acrylic rod, and that was a nightmare. The magnification was too much to overcome. To make matters worse, I shaped the rod before drilling the holes. Then I had problems casting the urethane which protects the wiring, the wiring was a mess....:
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I started over with a rectangular cross section acrylic rod. I used my drill press and drilled the holes before shaping the acrylic. As opposed to hand drilling by eye on a compound curve the first time. The acrylic below has holes drilled for the red, yellow and amber LEDs:
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The tail light without lights or wiring:
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All of the mesh will be black, and will be over all the openings:
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Round 2 of casting the wiring in urethane. You can see the LEDs on the ends. Those will get encased in urethane as well:
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A.J.