Home > Maintenance & Mods (L322) > Light Guards - Yes or No? |
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Joe90 Member Since: 29 Apr 2010 Location: Hampshire Posts: 6407 |
Fitting light guards to your FFRR? .
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17th Nov 2011 11:27pm |
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Cam-Tech-Craig Member Since: 03 Aug 2011 Location: Gloucestershire Posts: 16263 |
Yuk! nonononononononononononononononononononononononononononono!
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17th Nov 2011 11:28pm |
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Joe90 Member Since: 29 Apr 2010 Location: Hampshire Posts: 6407 |
That's a no then Craig? .
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18th Nov 2011 12:12am |
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T24RES Member Since: 22 Nov 2010 Location: Henley-on-Thames Posts: 936 |
Not unless you really had to. (e.g- your life depended on it) |
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18th Nov 2011 12:22am |
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rich Member Since: 17 Dec 2010 Location: sheffield Posts: 3 |
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18th Nov 2011 1:46am |
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Richcl Member Since: 23 Sep 2010 Location: Tewkesbury, Glos Posts: 1011 |
Worse when they are aftermarket chrome ones! |
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18th Nov 2011 10:35am |
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fisha Member Since: 25 Sep 2009 Location: Scotland Posts: 1345 |
they dont really protect against anything in reality ... if you hit something that will brussh off the guard, the light itself would have been able to handle the same anyway.
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18th Nov 2011 1:23pm |
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RRUK Site Supporter Member Since: 08 Jun 2007 Location: UK Posts: 6366 |
The expense of replacing cracked lenses is enough to make me want to put light guards on this one too, especially if you have the clear and SC all clear lenses. If you have LEDs, god help you if you need new ones! And that's just the rears, can you imagine how expensive a front LED with Adaptive bi-xenons is going to cost?
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18th Nov 2011 2:08pm |
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Philip Member Since: 05 Jan 2010 Location: UK Posts: 2563 |
There are no light guards for the 2010-on front lights.
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18th Nov 2011 2:31pm |
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ric355 Member Since: 02 May 2011 Location: Surrey, UK Posts: 302 |
Light guards = steaming pile ! |
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18th Nov 2011 7:20pm |
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Vogue Member Since: 31 Jan 2008 Location: on the hill Posts: 3733 |
no way!
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18th Nov 2011 7:32pm |
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ebajema Member Since: 24 Mar 2011 Location: New Plymouth Posts: 4782 |
No unless you are really off-roading but then use poly-carbonate over the top of the guard. For example my FFRR has a brush guard (I would never ever had installed one but it was on and taking it off would expose the holes drilled in the front fenders to install the bloody thing , plus they do help against the bloody Okadas here in Lagos) and I would "fill" the headlight section with a piece of poly-carbonate. The p-c is very strong and can take a hell of a beating and if something hits it and it cracks it takes a lot of energy and then hopefully the headlight only has a very light impact to deal with.
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18th Nov 2011 8:35pm |
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bozmandb9 Member Since: 06 Dec 2010 Location: Wallingford, Oxfordshire Posts: 1020 |
To me, all those bits and bobs, light guards, sidesteps, etc, just detract enormously from what is acknowledged to be a design icon. As has been stated, far from offering protection, they offer you bodywork damage in addition to a broken light. When you remove them they also require bodywork (filling and painting).
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18th Nov 2011 8:39pm |
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Mikeyjd Member Since: 14 Jun 2011 Location: Wrexham Posts: 543 |
No. I know the lights are expensive, but so is the whole car, you wouldn't want to wrap it up in bubble wrap.
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19th Nov 2011 12:57am |
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