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Leak Proof Headlights

Discussion in '2nd Gen. Tacomas (2005-2015)' started by teacher, Oct 20, 2016.

  1. Oct 20, 2016 at 8:26 PM
    #1
    teacher

    teacher [OP] New Member

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    cecil
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    Just bought an 06 Taco mainly to drive back and forth to school. It had been damaged and the headlights were repaired. After our first rain I discovered the lights to be fogged up with droplets inside. Removed the bulbs and ran a hair drier to eliminate the moisture. Next day, moisture was back. Checked out E-Bay and found a flock of styles. But also found comments about leaking. Any suggestions?
     
  2. Oct 20, 2016 at 8:27 PM
    #2
    memario1214

    memario1214 Hotshot Offroad Moderator Vendor

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    Are the replacements stock headlights? Are the rubber boots mounted properly on the back of the bulbs?
     
  3. Oct 20, 2016 at 8:42 PM
    #3
    excorcist

    excorcist Well-Known Member

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    Lots of people on here bought the black ones with the projectors you see all over ebay for ~140$. Some leaked some didn't. A simple tube of clear silicone around the housing fixes the leak issue. I just wasn't a fan of the style so retrofitted my own headlights, and ran a silicone bead around the headlight for extra insurance....

    If you want to save money and keep your stock headlights, and you think yours are leaking around the housing where they mate together, just run some silicone around it, or pop them in the oven, and seperate the halves, and use some of the factory sealing stuff (cant think of the name at the moment)
     
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    #3
  4. Oct 20, 2016 at 9:09 PM
    #4
    Pigpen

    Pigpen My truck is never clean

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    Access cab toolbox/ dog bed with seats and headrests deleted, waterproof TRD seat covers, yellow wire mod, diff breather relocated to tail light, engine block heater, Leer topper with Yakima tracks and rack, Yakima rack on cab, Ride Rite with Daystar cradles, CBI hidden front hitch, wired for winch front and rear Warn quick connect, Warn x8000i on external carrier, sway bar delete, trailer plug relocated to bumper, Pelfreybilt IFS and Mid skids, ECGS front diff bushing, ARB CKMA12 compressor, 255/85/16 Backcountrry MT 3 load E tires on stock steel rims, Up2NoGood heated mirror kit, Husky X-act Contour front floor liners, Northstar AGM 24F battery, Pelfreybilt bolt on sliders with kickout and top plates, TRD Pro headlights, Depo smoked tail lights, Energy suspension body mount bushing kit, OME Dakar leaf packs with AAL, Billstein B110 rear shocks, OME 90021 front shocks with 885 coils, SPC LR UCAs, Up2NoGood 2wd low range mod, 4 Wheel Campers Grandby slide in camper
    Buy some OEM take offs. They show up in the for sale threads pretty regularly. Aftermarket lights are a gamble.
     
    crashnburn80 likes this.
  5. Oct 20, 2016 at 9:12 PM
    #5
    crashnburn80

    crashnburn80 Vehicle Design Engineer

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    OEM, or go with CAPA certified. Which are 3rd party engineer tested to meet the OEM spec in quality and optics. They will cost more but be less than OEM.
     
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  6. Oct 20, 2016 at 9:13 PM
    #6
    excorcist

    excorcist Well-Known Member

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    Why not just re-seal his if he is keeping with factory headlights? He is going to have to remove them regardless.
     
  7. Oct 20, 2016 at 9:15 PM
    #7
    MSU Taco

    MSU Taco More cowbell

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    I agree. Bake it. Paint it. Re-seal it.
     
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  8. Oct 20, 2016 at 9:16 PM
    #8
    crashnburn80

    crashnburn80 Vehicle Design Engineer

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    Certainly wouldn't hurt to try as a first course of action since it costs almost nothing other than time.
     
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  9. Oct 20, 2016 at 9:18 PM
    #9
    memario1214

    memario1214 Hotshot Offroad Moderator Vendor

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    Who knows what extent we are talking about though...

    "It had been damaged and the headlights were repaired."
     
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  10. Oct 20, 2016 at 9:21 PM
    #10
    excorcist

    excorcist Well-Known Member

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    True. Could be damaged beyond repair I guess.
     
  11. Oct 20, 2016 at 9:23 PM
    #11
    MSU Taco

    MSU Taco More cowbell

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    Someone could have baked them before and warped it. Totally possible
     
  12. Oct 20, 2016 at 9:24 PM
    #12
    memario1214

    memario1214 Hotshot Offroad Moderator Vendor

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    We may need to resume this conversation when the OP chimes back in... I somehow doubt we have modded headlights on our hands. Most likely someone ran into something, lens cracked, someone tried to silicone/epoxy it, and it never sealed.
     
  13. Oct 20, 2016 at 11:15 PM
    #13
    teacher

    teacher [OP] New Member

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    Appears to have been disassembled and re-assembled, wil blow about this time with warm air and silicone seal the seams. May not have completely dried out first try. Looked clear, then parked in the sun where it fogged up, again. But not as bad.
     
  14. Oct 21, 2016 at 4:13 AM
    #14
    127.0.0.1

    127.0.0.1 AKA ::1

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    do not use silicone on headlights

    it continues to outgas even when hard and will smog up the lens over time

    use proper headlight seal putty


    anyhow OEM is the way to go with headlights, it's the only legal and reliable
    option. no the headlight police ain't gonna get you, just saying there are laws
    and aftermarkets do not pass the specifications, ever
     
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  15. Oct 21, 2016 at 9:34 PM
    #15
    excorcist

    excorcist Well-Known Member

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    You use the silicone on the outside not inside of the headlight, but ya either way the factory used butyl is easy and less of a mess, if you can pick it up locally. Silicone can be a pain especially if you ever have to remove it for any reason, I have used, and seen it used on the outside of many headlights without issue.

    I went with the cheapest HID/ projector combo option available last time and it served me well for around 6 years never had a problem so I dont think the reliability is an issue.

    I did a projector conversion on my last truck and had it for about 6 years and was one of my favorite mods and only increases safety, I see it being no more illegal than your tires sticking out a half inch beyond your fenders, your third brake light being covered by a softopper,, or anything else along those lines. IF you are obeying other laws they are never going to ticket you for properly adjusted aftermarket headlights.
     

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