Choosing the Right Fog Lights for Your Jeep daddycow.com
Fog lights are defined by their engineered beam shape, which falls into three primary categories. Fog Beams (Wide/Flood) are the classic choice for their namesake condition. They produce an extremely wide, flat, and short-reaching fan of light. This pattern is designed to illuminate the immediate foreground, ditches, and road edges without reflecting light off fog, snow, or dust back into the driver's eyes. The sharp horizontal cutoff prevents light from climbing upward into precipitation. Driving Beams (Spot) are the opposite. They project a concentrated, pencil-like beam that reaches far down the road or trail. These are ideal for high-speed desert runs or seeing distant obstacles on open trails but are terrible in weather, as they will brightly illuminate precipitation directly in front of you. Combination Beams (Fog/Driving Hybrid) offer a compromise, merging a central spot for distance with a surrounding corona of wider light. While versatile, they often don't excel in extreme conditions as perfectly as a dedicated pattern.