any halogen replacement but the piaa true whites are the best they are in my jetta for 6 months with no problems
The answer depends on where the vehicle is registered. In the US and Canada, some states and provinces specifically require headlamps to produce white light. Others say headlamps must conform to the applicable Federal standards (which specify white light). But some states and provinces only say that all front-facing lamps must produce white or yellow (or "white to yellow", or "white or amber", or "white to amber") light. And some state that front lamps must produce white light unless they were originally manufactured to produce another color. Some countries (Brazil, New Zealand, Japan, the Netherlands and others) have in the past permitted headlamps to produce white or yellow light. Some of them still do. France required yellow headlights from the 1930s to the early 1990s; they're no longer required there but they remain permitted. So you will have to check exactly what the vehicle equipment requirements are in your own jurisdiction to have a usable answer to this question.
White light: makes up the rainbow Ultraviolet light: the beams that come from the sun along with Infared light
White light: makes up the rainbow Ultraviolet light: the beams that come from the sun along with Infared light
lesuire clothes with light color such as blue, pink and white.
Blue lights are allowed only on authorized (police, fire, ambulance, snow removal) vehicles. Headlamps on all vehicles are required to emit _white_ light. The allowable range of "white" is rather large. It can contain a fairly substantial tint towards any color (including blue) and still be considered legally white. That's why even the reputable brands contain bulbs with blue glass that advertise "whiter" light. It's a misnomer; tinting the light towards blue, even if it stays within the allowable white range, does not make the light "whiter". And even if you buy legal "whiter" bulbs, if your headlamps look like they might not be legal, you can expect extra attention from the cops, whether they scrutinize your headlamps or simply notice your car doing 64 in a 55 instead of the car next to you with normal headlamps doing 67 in a 55. Moreover, any bulb that has colored glass is filtering out a significant amount of the light that would be reaching the road if the bulbs had proper colorless clear glass. It's a bad tradeoff: extra hassle from the cops in exchange for poorer nighttime and bad-weather seeing. Moreover, be aware that different headlamp technologies look different because they create light differently. HID ("Xenon") and the newest LED headlamps produce a colder white light than traditional halogen headlamps, but they're all white. It is illegal (and dangerous) to try to "convert" halogen headlamps into Xenons with an "HID kit". Every light and reflector function on the outside of a vehicle has a required color. Front side marker lights and reflectors have to be amber, rear ones have to be red. Tail lights and brake lights all have to be red. Front turn signals have to be amber. Backup lights have to be white. In a couple of cases there are two different colors allowed (front parking lights can be white or amber, rear turn signals can be amber or red) as long as they're not mismatched on the same car. Putting nonstandard colored lights on the car is like hanging a sign on it that says "Stop me, officer! There are probably more things you can write me a ticket for, not just these illegal lights!".
yes, i have one. they come in all kinds of colors. limegreen and white, light blue and white, yellow and white, hot pink and white, red and white, black and white, red and black, etc.
white tigers
As a man, I would go with a black or forest green. But as it is that a Jetta seems to be more of a ladies car, white would be a good choice for a woman. The white seems to be a popular choice among the younger generations.
Fog is white, so really you could use any colour headlamp instead of white and be able to see better than using the normal white headlamps. It has to do with the light bouncing around and into and through the fog. Yellow is easier to see and easier on the eyes than, say, red or blue or green. Does that help you?
all kinds in my case i like latin white girls light skin and im black enjoy life
All around white light
You get white light. This is an instructive experiment to perform with a pair of prisms.