Do NOT put LED "conversion bulbs" in an old school light assembly.
When you have a bulb, the light exits the bulb in a 360 degree field, and it bounces off the reflector in the light assembly. What you see from outside isn't the 3/4" light bulb...but the
reflection of that bulb in the 20 square inches of reflector surface.
LEDs are directional - they send light in ONE direction, usually out the top of the bulb, directly at the red lens (ignoring the reflector completely). That gives you a 3/4" hot spot...and a dark lens and reflector.
If you look at
effective LED conversions, it isn't just a bulb. It's a whole assembly, designed around the directional output of an LED chip.
69/70 charger led conversion kit:
View attachment 1919212
See how many LEDs are in there? It's a hell of a lot more than six...like the stock
That is terrible. You fix up a car you like and it gets damaged so quickly. Hopefully you can get it back together and looking right soon.
The following is NOT AN ATTACK on you in any way....
Maybe the other driver has grown accustomed to seeing the bright lights of late model cars and your classic just doesn't put out as much light as he is used to seeing.
Again, I'm not blaming you, I'm just putting this idea out there as a possible caution to others.
I know that as I am distracted while driving either by daydreaming, singing along with a song on the radio, whatever, a set of bright brake lights usually snaps me out of the daze pretty fast.
@1 Wild R/T is a guy that has mentioned how dim he noticed classic car taillights to be and it got my attention. I have made efforts to make my taillights and brake lights brighter by painting the inside of the housings with white paint.
Stock:
View attachment 1919131
After painting the insides of the housings with white house paint:
View attachment 1919130
This might help you in the future.
I like the idea about improving the reflectivity of the reflectors to make it brighter. But i detect a bit of photo trickery in your photos. The top pic in in bright sunlight with the car casting a shadow on the concrete. And the bottom pic is not . Making the bottom pic taillights looking brighter in the dark. Just my observation from a guy thats practically blind in my left eye.