Where is the best place to put the light bar on my Wrangler?
#11
A couple comments to add to what has been mentioned above. Yeah, above the windshield the light thrown on the hood is pretty distracting. I do have a shovel and axe mounted there, so that doesn't help. Honestly, I've found two uses--maybe three--for them. First, if you're fording deep water at night, they light your path while your other ones are obscured. And, if you have any glass lenses on lighting that is turned on that comes in contact with the water, you risk cracking. You really should turn them off and let them cool down before entering the water. The second use is when setting up camp. They do a nice job lighting up the area. Just don't look that direction. The third (possible) use is when lead calls out over the radio that someone is coming the other direction balls to the walls and the road is dusty. I throw on every light to ensure he sees me.
Crossing Lee Creek in Arkansas ...
Added lights on the bumper are more useful. I've adjusted mine so that the fogs, the low beam headlights, and the driving lights give a nice, even pattern on the roadway. Yeah, that's an illegal on-road configuration in many states, but I don't use the driving lights on the road.
BTW, it you do want your lights up high, then set back from the windshield actually works quite nicely. I had that configuration for a while and it does not light up the hood area, yet projects light a long ways down the road.
Medano Pass on the way to Great Sand Dunes National Park ...
Crossing Lee Creek in Arkansas ...
Added lights on the bumper are more useful. I've adjusted mine so that the fogs, the low beam headlights, and the driving lights give a nice, even pattern on the roadway. Yeah, that's an illegal on-road configuration in many states, but I don't use the driving lights on the road.
BTW, it you do want your lights up high, then set back from the windshield actually works quite nicely. I had that configuration for a while and it does not light up the hood area, yet projects light a long ways down the road.
Medano Pass on the way to Great Sand Dunes National Park ...
#12
Last edited by Mark Doiron; 09-14-2019 at 08:00 AM.