Disaster
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I think part of the issue is how you are taking the pics - they look underexposed - its almost better to take a pic at dusk when you can get a better idea for the light spread.
I definitely underexposed the shots a bit. Need to be about two f-stops brighter. I will equalize these in photoshop but also retake them.
Either way, the HIDs in the Genesis look much brighter than those in the other cars, even with hot spots.
I don't mind the spots being a tiny bit hot...but if they are too hot compared to the sides, it will hurt side vision. It will be easier to compare when I use the proper exposure and a bigger wall (will try to find a building with no lights in the back that I can move 25 feet from.)
Also, maybe you have the lights inserted upside down? Don't know if that makes a difference, but when I inserted mine, I had the 90° plug perpendicular to the ground and twisted it down as I locked the bulbs to the assembly.
It isn't possible to insert them upside down. One notch is bigger than the others. I wonder, however, if it is possible for the bulbs to be installed upside down in the H11 harness? One thing I noticed. The stock halogens had a metal fitting, vs. the plastic prongs on the HID kit. I wonder if the Chinese HID kit is a bit less precise in bulb placement. I also noticed I could rock the HID bulb a bit, after it is inserted.
Headlights in general should illuminate from ~10' to 350' in front of the car. The light pattern should drop 2" every 25'. I think the Genesis headlights should cast light up to 150°, to the pattern should be wide. I will take some pics of my headlights tonight and show my patterns.
The requirement is 2.1 inches, 25 feet in front of the car, but it varies depending on how high the headlights are mounted on the vehicle. If I recall, the Genesis lights measured about 26 and 1/2 inches high.
http://www.danielsternlighting.com/tech/aim/aim.html
One thing you should see is constant light on the ground from about 10' out. Fog lights typically illuminate 0-25' out and up to 180° - the purpose is low speed, low visibility, so they are to help focus on the road right in front of you.
That is one of the differences you can see with halogens vs. HID's. I notice a lot of the halogens have more flood closer to the car. Also, the yellow tint is more "visible." If you have too much flood close to the car it can give you the illusion of better lighting while you actually miss stuff further away. That is just one reason it is bad to run HID's in halogen housings.