Daytime running light lamp replacement
AFS | Technology Library | Automobile Technology | Mitsubishi Motors Automobile Manufacturing | MITSUBISHI MOTORS
There's no physical movement on the Outlander (mine's 2012 ZH XLS), it uses these inner reflectors, simply turning them on/off depending on wheel angle vs speed. So if I slow down and take a left turn, the left-hand inner light turns on, casting a pool of light to the left and down.
I haven't found anything yet which indicates whether or not the DRL and AFS system use the exact same reflectors; if I found a case of someone having both systems from stock, using the same housing, then that would indicate yes.
I was actually quite surprised when I figured out it was using these lights; from the way the light is cast, I figured it was turning on one side of the fog lights. On my model, these inner reflectors are used only for the AFS system, they have no other use. Maybe I should just try swapping in a relay into the DRL slot and see if they turn on...
I haven't found anything yet which indicates whether or not the DRL and AFS system use the exact same reflectors; if I found a case of someone having both systems from stock, using the same housing, then that would indicate yes.
I was actually quite surprised when I figured out it was using these lights; from the way the light is cast, I figured it was turning on one side of the fog lights. On my model, these inner reflectors are used only for the AFS system, they have no other use. Maybe I should just try swapping in a relay into the DRL slot and see if they turn on...
Last edited by RoGuE_StreaK; Oct 7, 2014 at 06:03 PM.
Vadimus, do you have any info on the particulars of the bulbs etc? By "cannot have both", is this an ECU thing or physical limitations/differences? If for instance someone wanted DRL instead of AFS.
I would imagine while the reflector remains the same, there would be a mechanical part for AFS where as DRL are fixed bulbs.
Vadimus, I do like the AFS so would want to keep it, just laterally thinking of ways to get both operating "legally"
Which probably can't happen, as legally speaking there aren't any certified LED drop-ins available yet; I think Phillips are the only ones that have made any certified replacements.Any idea if the different bulbs/sockets put the filament focal point at a different location?
From personal observation, would your stock DRL beams be useable as AFS if only one side was lit?
Nope, as I said, on the Outlander it only turns the light on or off depending on speed vs wheel angle. Think more "cornering lamp" than "adaptive", lots of cars have bumper-mounted lights for this (Nissan Maxima comes to mind, Holden Statesman I think, ...), just never seen it in a headlamp assembly before.
Thanks for the clarifications, I don't think this style of lighting would benefit cornering..my 2 cents


