Success! I ran into some unexpected snags but I am very happy with the results.
While I was at it, I also installed the Osram turn signal bulbs that arrived.
Before
After
D2S bulb, D2S/H7 adapter and Osram Rallye bulb for comparison
Mock-up of how the adapter is "supposed" to be attached to the bulb, it slides on from the connector side and you can use anything you like to adhere the two together. I used tape for a mock-up.
I tried putting the bulb into the projector like this, however I found that the base of the bulb is too large compared to the base of the H7 bulb and won't fit fully inside without some trimming. Being only this far in, I didn't want to risk cutting the bulb and ruining it, so I decided to go another route. I put the adapter on the
other side of the bulb and used some super glue for a quick mock-up to test. The other benefit to putting the adapter on the other side of the bulb is that compared to the H7 halogen bulb, the length is almost matched with the HID bulb only being a few MM longer, which helps give the best focus by matching where the halogen bulb would be sitting in the projector.
Note that the "tab" of the H7 adapter should be at 6 o'clock and so should the ground wire of the HID bulb.
Another angle of the tab orientation and ground wire. The Morimoto bulb has notches and cuts around the base of the bulb, which made lining up the H7 adapter a breeze.
Once I had it set right, I went around the top of the bulb with more super glue to make it permanent.
I used Wurth Fastfix, which is a liquid super glue that can bond metal, wood and plastic to each other. It worked perfectly for this. Here's both bulbs finished.
Fitment is perfect! Tabs were a little tricky to get to grab onto the bulb but a little bending with needlenose pliers did the trick.
For the bulbs, you will need D2S to AMP adapters (if you have a standard H7 HID kit) and I also grabbed these boots. I cut out a 1.5" hole in the stock boot and slide this into the gap, the smaller cover fits perfectly onto the top of the D2S connector adapter then the stock boot slides on. Sizing is
slightly off and I'm not 100% happy with it. I will be going another route for this, but this worked for now.
View of the finished boot
First test mount and fire-up (during the afternoon)
Passenger side also on!
Test fire on both lights
And a video of warm-up at night.
[video=youtube;3o5sMEsS9sw]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3o5sMEsS9sw[/video]
The parts used for this project:
Morimoto D2S 4500k bulbs -
https://www.theretrofitsource.com/components/bulbs/d2s-morimoto-xb-hid.html
D2S to AMP adapters -
https://www.theretrofitsource.com/accessories/misc/amp-to-d2s-ballast-adapters-straight.html
H7 to D2S adapters -
http://www.ebay.com/itm/H7-to-D2S-D2R-Adapters-for-Philips-Osram-Xenon-HID-Bulb-/270354512667
I ordered these boots to fix the shoddy attempt I made at sealed boots, these will be much better as I don't have to cut a hole for the D2S adapter and it has holes so I can feed all the wiring through. 75mm is the size we need.
https://www.theretrofitsource.com/accessories/build-materials/rubber-housing-caps.html
The output on these is awesome! I did have to lower the vertical adjustment slightly, drove around until I got an idea of how much they needed to be adjusted. The Osram Rallyes are, in my opinion, the best option for halogen. This would be the best option if you want to do with HIDs. The only reason I say this is because I spent a couple hundred dollars trying to make plug and play style H7 HID bulbs work and they constantly kept falling out and output was questionable. The awesome part about D2S bulbs is that you can also use Philips 85122 bulbs and Osrams which are factory in a lot of high end vehicles. I went with Morimoto bulbs because they have some of the higher output for it's kelvin colors and are almost half the price of the bulbs mentioned prior. The warranty is also rock solid and TheRetrofitSource is a reputable vendor.