THAWA - What about that picture makes you want those lights?! "Bright and clear" are especially divorced from what that picture shows. You can't even begin to make
any judgement on that stuff unless you know the bidirectional reflectance distribution function of the wall's material, use multiple cameras, calibrate the precise geometric relationship between the lamp, the wall, and the cameras, and know or control the parameters of the cameras, their optics, and their sensing elements. Believe me, it's a big problem in image-based rendering, and I've involved in and exposed to a lot of research in the field.
You guys aren't paying attention to what I'm saying.
You can't tell how big a problem that upward rise is from a picture of the lights against a wall! What makes you judge that they're "not terribly pronounced?" Did you measure the subtended solid angles? Or the precise elevations? Did you think about what it means for
any light to be thrown above horizontal elevation at all? Did you measure absolute or relative luminous flux?
The upward rise is what ECE-type headlights are all about. It is significant. The near-side beam pattern has a very short seeing distance to limit glare, and the off-side beam pattern has a long seeing distance to allow you to see. They're mutually exclusive goals; you can't have both. Completely different engineering goes into the near-side and off-side beam patterns, just like completely different engineering goes into the front and rear brakes and suspension.
If you admit that pictures don't mean anything, then quit using them to make engineering decisions! That's the same rule the US justice system uses, right? If a form of evidence has prejudicial value exceeding its probative value (which is certainly the case here), it is inadmissible in court.
And it's insufficient to use the "people don't flash their high beams at me" metric for headlight acceptability. DOT-spec headlights from American manufacturers are ridiculously glaring, so it's hard to tell that you don't actually just have those crappy lights. Not being flashed at doesn't mean you're not causing a dangerous situation.
The worst part of all this is that Mike's stock lights already had a good beam pattern!

"Just reading vrg3's convoluted, information-packed posts made me feel better all over again." -- subyluvr2212