Chimera lights
Chimera lights
Author
Discussion

kriss5154

Original Poster:

129 posts

223 months

Tuesday 2nd January 2018
quotequote all
Needs some thoughts have 1996 chimera, was thinking of buying light kit to cover the lights like Griv, I seem to think that TVR did offer a Chim with lights like this, am I going mad, I have looked at modification not sure it’s worth doing, any thoughts

Classic Chim

12,424 posts

171 months

Tuesday 2nd January 2018
quotequote all
I think the last cars had them and from about 2000 onwards the factory offered this conversion from new. .
Tvr Central do this at a reasonsble price I seem to remember.
Might be worth checking there website for details.


TVRJAS

2,391 posts

151 months

Tuesday 2nd January 2018
quotequote all
Big thread here if you're thinking Mk3.... https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

Had mine done last year Mk3 style.

kriss5154

Original Poster:

129 posts

223 months

Tuesday 2nd January 2018
quotequote all
Thanks

Litcoat

143 posts

119 months

Tuesday 2nd January 2018
quotequote all
I think it's a worthwhile mod, gives the car more flowing lines from front to rear.

QBee

22,074 posts

166 months

Saturday 6th January 2018
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The options are:

Refurbish the originals and/or use brighter bulbs (Osram, Ring, Phillips all make 80-120% brighter bulbs).

Convert to VW Lupo lights

Convert to Tuscan style projector lights - Central TVR amongst other offer this, and it includes a front end respray.

Mark 3 faired in lights.


You will get various opinions, but the Mark 3 faired in look seem to get the most votes.

Engineer1949

1,423 posts

166 months

Saturday 6th January 2018
quotequote all
lupo conversion gets my vote very good beam all sealed so no silvering issues.

tvr_9_march 5 by Brundall Motorsport, on Flickr

john

mike-v2tmf

858 posts

101 months

Saturday 6th January 2018
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bobfather

11,194 posts

277 months

Saturday 6th January 2018
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As I understand, the Lupo conversion has a lot of advantages but the beam isn't as good as you would expect. The problem appears to be that the beam pattern is disrupted because the reflector has a larger diameter than the reshaped lamp shroud. The beam on the original setup is a combination of the reflector and the lens. The Lupo beam is created purely by the reflector so cutting off part of that reflected light damages the beam pattern

SILICONEKID 345HP 12.03

14,997 posts

253 months

Saturday 6th January 2018
quotequote all
bobfather said:
As I understand, the Lupo conversion has a lot of advantages but the beam isn't as good as you would expect. The problem appears to be that the beam pattern is disrupted because the reflector has a larger diameter than the reshaped lamp shroud. The beam on the original setup is a combination of the reflector and the lens. The Lupo beam is created purely by the reflector so cutting off part of that reflected light damages the beam pattern
I have that very same problem , the pattern is disturbed and is useless .
Would it be worth removing the shrouds ?

SILICONEKID 345HP 12.03

14,997 posts

253 months

Saturday 6th January 2018
quotequote all
[quote=SILICONEKID 345HP 12.03]

I have that very same problem , the pattern is disturbed and is useless .
Would it be worth removing the shrouds ?
Not hapoy with mine and whats worth they are just glued in so If they get damaged its an awfull job .

Wish I had gone for the mk111 ..

Soend spend spend .

ianwayne

7,721 posts

290 months

Saturday 6th January 2018
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I actually think faired-in looks the best, But 2nd prize is the Lupo lights IMHO. I have them on my current Chimaera fitted by the last owner at Carizma.

They're brighter and have better beam than the originals; I hadn't noticed any disruption to the beam myself. However, I recently found condensation spots inside mine:



A bit disappointed because I thought they were sealed beam type!?

Edited by ianwayne on Saturday 6th January 22:48

portzi

2,325 posts

197 months

Sunday 7th January 2018
quotequote all
ianwayne said:
I actually think faired-in looks the best, But 2nd prize is the Lupo lights IMHO. I have them on my current Chimaera fitted by the last owner at Carizma.

They're brighter and have better beam than the originals; I hadn't noticed any disruption to the beam myself. However, I recently found condensation spots inside mine:

A bit disappointed because I thought they were sealed beam type!?

Edited by ianwayne on Saturday 6th January 22:48
Hi Ian,

PSA
https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

I had the same problem in one of my lupos about 3 years ago, it turned out to be the back inspection hatch on the lupo light had come undone leaving a small gap, presumably allowing condensation to form, I re-closed the hatch and have had no problems since, hope this works for you.

Kind regards
Mark

ianwayne

7,721 posts

290 months

Sunday 7th January 2018
quotequote all
Thanks for that, I didn't find anything on my search.

I have a 1996 facelift front end so have access panels in the wheelarches. I'll check when the weather get a bit warmer.