Light Beam Patterns Help You Choose the Right Lighting
Vehicle lighting is available in a huge variety of types and configurations, making it easy to lose track of what you actually need. Some lamps are designed to project light far down the road, while others focus on illuminating the roadside or the area immediately surrounding the vehicle. As a result, two lights with the same light output can deliver completely different results in practice.
That is exactly why we work with eight different light beam patterns, also referred to as beam zones. Simply put, a beam zone is the area around your vehicle illuminated by a specific type of lamp. By organising our range in this way, it becomes much easier to find the right lighting. For each beam pattern, we show you exactly what the light distribution looks like, which lamps belong to that category, what applications it is suitable for, and how it performs in real-world conditions.
Work Scene
Within this beam zone, you will find:
Work scene lighting is designed to illuminate the immediate area around a vehicle. Rather than projecting light over long distances, the focus is on creating a well-lit working area around a car, van, truck, or machine.
This makes this beam pattern ideal for anyone who regularly carries out work around their vehicle. Think of mechanics, emergency services, agricultural vehicles, transport companies, or anyone who frequently loads and unloads in the dark.


Fog
Within this beam zone, you will find:
Fog lighting produces a low and wide beam that shines close to the road surface. This helps minimise the amount of light reflected back by fog, rain, or snow.
Traditionally, fog lights often feature a yellow or warm white light colour. This warmer colour temperature helps reduce reflections when visibility is limited by adverse weather conditions. As a result, this beam pattern is ideal for drivers who regularly travel through foggy areas, snowy regions, or heavy rain.
Driving Mist
Within this category, you will mainly find:
Driving mist lighting bridges the gap between traditional fog lighting and driving lighting. The beam remains wide enough to provide excellent visibility close to the vehicle while also projecting further down the road.
The light colour is often slightly cooler than that of traditional fog lights, improving object visibility without completely losing the characteristics of a fog beam. This means you not only gain better visibility directly in front of the vehicle but can also spot what lies further ahead much sooner.


Wide
Within this beam zone, you will find:
A wide beam pattern focuses on delivering maximum illumination across a broad area. The emphasis is not on long-range visibility, but on making everything directly in front of and alongside the vehicle clearly visible.
Because the beam is spread over a wide area, roadsides, obstacles, and side tracks remain much more visible than with lighting designed primarily for distance. This makes the wide beam pattern particularly popular among off-road enthusiasts, 4x4 drivers, and anyone who frequently drives in poorly lit environments.
Driving
Within this beam zone, you will find:
Driving lighting is designed as an extension of the vehicle's original headlights. As a result, the beam pattern feels natural and integrates seamlessly with the existing lighting setup.
The beam illuminates both the area directly in front of the vehicle and the road further ahead. This creates an excellent balance between distance and practical usability. That is why driving lighting is one of the most popular beam patterns for everyday use on dark rural roads.


Driving Combo
Within this beam zone, you will find:
Driving combo combines two popular beam characteristics into a single light pattern. It delivers both wide illumination and impressive long-range visibility.
This means you benefit not only from better visibility further down the road but also from improved illumination of the roadside and surrounding areas. For drivers who regularly travel on dark rural roads, this is often one of the most versatile beam patterns available.
Spot
Within this category, you will mainly find:
With a spot beam pattern, the entire focus is on distance. The beam is kept narrow so that as much light as possible is projected as far ahead as possible. As a result, objects at long distances become visible much earlier than with wider beam patterns.
Spot lighting is widely used on long, dark roads, in rural areas, and during off-road driving where maximum viewing distance is essential.


Hyper Spot
Within this beam zone, you will find:
Hyper spot takes the concept of a standard spot beam even further. The beam is extremely narrow and concentrates virtually all available light output on maximum distance. This creates an impressive range that is especially popular in professional off-road, rally, and motorsport applications.
Beam width plays only a minor role here. Everything is focused on making objects visible as early as possible, even when they are located far ahead of the vehicle.