QuantumRift
Been here awhile...
You will be very happy with an HID upgrade. When I installed one side, I lit it up and compared it to the stock halogen. It made the halogen appear as if it were a 6 volt light, like something was wrong with it.
Look at the attached pic. You can see the beam pattern on my garage door. The front of the car is only 2 feet from the door. The left is the HID and the right is the stock halogen. Not only is the HID light output white, the beam pattern is so much larger. If you need help with it send me a PM and I will assist you.
HIDs require more power to start up, but less after they are up and running. The kit worked fine connected directly to the stock headlight socket, but I added a relay harness after the install. There was no noticible difference when I added the relay harness.
Automobile/motorcycle style HID's need a projector style luminaire.
Period.
What you have, if you have halogen headlights, are reflector-style luminaires.
If you put an HID bulb in a reflector style luminaire all you will achieve is very bright scattered light. As the driver or rider, you will love it.
As an oncoming vehicle, you will curse it.
This was mentioned in another thread - HIDs are designed and intended to be used in a lensed method that allows better aiming of the light beam. Placing a HID bulb in an enclosure designed for halogens will be GREAT for you, the driver, but blinding to oncoming traffic. The end result is putting a wonderfully bright light in a fixture that then scatters the beam and produces glare to those drivers approaching you. I'm not saying it's good or bad. I have the same issue with my motorcyle. I can put HIDs in it (dual beam 55/65 bulbs currently) and I'll get a helluva light outpout, but the reflector behind the bulb scatters it more and blinds oncoming drivers).
If you own a Genny with the tech HIDs it's VERY apparent that this is the case. The HIDs do NOT blind oncoming drivers (they are for low beam) and their pattern is very defined not to do so. They even articulate with the turn of the car and the elevation of the nose. Very cool indeed.
And this is something to consider, not that I care one way or the other:
"Update: May 3, 2007:
NHTSA Cracks Down on Aftermarket HID Conversion Kits
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) is targeting high-intensity discharge (HID) conversion kits for enforcement actions. NHTSA has concluded that it is impossible to produce HID conversion kits (converting a halogen system to HID) that would be compliant with the federal lighting standard, Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS) No. 108. The noncompliant kits frequently include a HID bulb, a ballast, an igniter, a relay and wiring harness adapters. The NHTSA believes this equipment presents a safety risk to the public since the kits can be expected to produce excessive glare to oncoming motorists. In one investigation, the NHTSA found that an HID conversion headlamp exceeded the maximum allowable candlepower by over 800%.
Under FMVSS No. 108 Section S7.7 (replaceable light sources), each replaceable light source for headlamps must be designed to conform to the dimensions and electrical specifications for the headlamp source it is intended to replace. For example, if an HID kit is marketed as replacing an H1 light source, then it must match the H1's wire coil filament size and location, the electrical connector size and location and the ballast design for use with an H1 light source (which is impossible since there is no ballast). Consequently, companies that are manufacturing HID light sources (e.g., D1S, D1R, D2S, D2R, 9500, etc.) with incandescent light source bases (e.g., H1, H3, H7, H8, H9, H11, H13, HB1, HB2, HB3, HB4, HB5, etc.) should be aware that this light source design would not be one that conforms to FMVSS No. 108, and could not be imported and sold in the United States without violating Federal law. (The importer is treated as the manufacturer and subject to the same fines and penalties that apply to a domestic manufacturer.)
NHTSA has also determined that a commonly used disclaimer "for off-road use only" has no legal meaning and is not recognized by the agency as the manufacturer, importer and retailer are not in a position to control use once a product has been sold. Any equipment offered for sale which is covered by FMVSS No. 108 (headlamps, taillamps, side markers, etc.) must comply with the standard."
Anyways, for what it's worth.

