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"I watched how-to videos here, but found Custom Dynamics' prices and kits more appealing."
Thanks for the web traffic, Scott. I find it interesting that people watch our videos to learn how to install lights, but they purchase elsewhere. I could understand this if our products were priced excessively higher than others, but they are not. Boogey Lights are competitively priced and they are the best and brightest product on the market. For over 20 years all we've offered is accent lighting. Get your brake lights and turn signals elsewhere, but if you want the best accent lights you'll want Boogey Lights. You also get a true lifetime warranty on our products, which many claim to offer but few deliver.
HOG_0308 - You might want to try our new multi-color strips, Fireworks Ultimate. These low profile flexible strips and wheel pods offer the ability to select any of 7 different colors so you can ride with a legal color and display a variety of colors and special effects when parked. There is no other multi-color product on the market that compares, period. Check it out: http://www.boogey.com/products/fireworks
P.S. I just created a special discount coupon code for HDForums members. Enter the code in the shopping cart and a 10% discount will be applied to your order during the month of July. Coupon code: HDF0710.
Scott,
i have gone over all the posts and recommendations, im going with your fireworks model; however i wont be able to do the coupon. im not going to get them until September. im in the middle of purchasing a home and the wife has forbidden me from spending a dime... lol i know wiped whatever, but it is what it is...
thanks again for all the info guys, i really did appreciated it.
I run white Boogey Lights on my black 09 Street Glide. Boogey uses a 5mm bulb and some other brands are only 3mm. The white really sets off the chrome at night. I am somewhere around 140 or so bulbs and you can not see any of them. The trick is to tastefully apply them to where they accent the engine, etc without seeing the bulbs or wires from the side. It took me about 4 hrs to do the install. Make all your eletrical connections first with the lights hanging in the area you need them. Then turn them on in a darkened garage so you can do the final positioning of the light strips. Only peel back a 1/2" of the adhesive backing tape, then slowing pull it off as you place the strip. It can be a little too much if you apply too many lights. Boogey has a lifetime replacement warranty on the led's and have great customer service. Hope this info helps you on your decision. They are legal while riding in Maryland except for LE colors (red and blue) and can not strobe while riding. The extra light gives added visibility at night and it never hurts to be seen more easily.
I've done several Harley's and Japanese bikes. I have 240 lights on my Street Glide. I bought a lift table for that main reason, got tired of seeing half *** jobs, started doing them myself.
I chose this site because it shows you what they look like both lite up and not lite up. You can find many other sellers that have different sizes and colors, and a lot have even cheaper shipping. Most are from China so you may have to wait awhile for it to arrive. I got a short set of red ones and taped them under the top arch of my sissy bar with 3M car trim tape you can get from any auto parts store. Hooked them up to my brake light flasher and let me tell you, they are bright. You can get them in several different lengths and basically with this design every centimeter in length listed is how many LEDs there are (i.e. 96 cm length gives you 96 LEDs) It has a simple small two wire lead coming out of the sealed unit that is easy to hide along the frame or under seat or where ever you want to run it. And if the strip is too long you can cut it to length as long as the remaining LED are a multiple of 3s. With mine the wire colors were silver and copper (the insulation is clear and just the metal wire is that color). I hooked up the copper one to the positive and the silver one to the negative. Easy to test before you connect them permanently by just touching them to the battery. If they don't light up just reverse the wires, LEDs after all are diodes (the "D" in LED) and have to be hooked up in the right polarity to function.
Have them, and have installed several on many different bikes. They are illegal to run while underway here, but have never heard of anyone being stopped for them. I run them at night to increase my visibility to others. LEDs are easy basic electrical installs. I run a remote controlled setup...steady, multiple intensity, heartbeat, strobe. Check oznium.com for supplies. They have provided excellent service
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