PIAA LED Driving Light Review

PIAA LP550 clear_BS28301PIAA LP550 Install: Letting High-Tech Light The Way

When the touch of a dash-mounted switch brings the sun out on a stretch of twisting, two-lane country road, the edginess of night driving is softened considerably.

Such is the case when I mounted a set of PIAA’s newest innovation in lighting products on my GMC Sierra 1500: the LP550 LED driving lights.

These five-inch-diameter lights use a single, rear-facing LED to provide a bluish-white light (6000 degrees Kelvin) with the intensity of those on a small aircraft coming in for a landing.

They appear to be at least twice as bright as my 2011 GMC’s  high-beams with about 30-percent longer reach. 

Rear-facing LED is signature design of PIAA’s LP550 driving lights. Light output is 6000-degrees Kelvin.Rear-facing LED is signature design of PIAA’s LP550 driving lights. Light output is 6000-degrees Kelvin.

Their brightness comes from PIAA’s exclusive Reflector Facing Technology (RFT), which uses LED rearward-facing bulbs to concentrate and focus the beam pattern more precisely than other driving light designs. 

PIAA says RFT provides greater light output-per-watt while drawing less amperage than traditional HID, halogen and forward-facing LED driving lights.

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The LP550s also come with a limited lifetime warranty, so their $400/pair cost can be amortized over a long period of time on whatever vehicle or piece of equipment they might be installed on.

Installation is easy because the lights come with a quality harness with switch and relay already wired in.

All one has to do is run the harness, mount the lights, plug in the connectors, and hook the ground and hot to the battery or other 12V power source. 

I put a set on Project Bedrock and have found they are great for illuminating those backroads late at night when my truck is the only one rolling through the darkness.