I was eating dinner with some friends at my local headlight-culture seafood restaurant/THC lounge, a place called High Breams, when I first heard the scuffle. I was already sort of lit after consuming a fillet of bream soaked in THC oil so initially I didn’t trust my senses. Then, after a flying chair caught me on the back of the head, sending my face smashing into my key lime pie, I realized what was happening around me was actually happening around me. What was going on was a brawl, a brutal, savage restaurant fight involving plates, forks, bottles of Worcestershire sauce and more, all over which shape of sealed-beam headlights – round or rectangular – was more appealing.
To people outside of the Headlamp Community, this may seem like a trivial, even inane distinction to make, but among sealed beam aficionados, this distinction has a near-religious impact. Even other members of the Headlamp Community, like the composite lamp subgroup, often fail to see the importance of this inter-nacine sealed beam headlight fighting, but I assure you, it’s real.
After I awoke in my pie, hours after the restaurant had closed, I started to make my way back home, but the round vs. rectangular conflict stuck with me. I’ve been thinking about it a lot, and I think the very notion of a binary good/bad distinction is absurd, but there are contexts were round works better, and context where rectangular works better. I think it’s even possible to come up with some rules, or maybe guidelines, to help make this call. So, with that in mind, let’s look at some cars that have had both round and rectangular sealed beam headlamps on what is otherwise essentially the same car, and see what conclusions we can draw.

I think one of the best comparisons we can make is with the Golf/Rabbit design, which started with round headlamps and then switched to rectangular in 1979. I’ve written about this switch before, because I think it’s interesting.

I think it’s interesting because the original Italdesign prototypes of the Golf used rectangular lamps, which does seem, objectively, to fit better with the design. But when it came to the production car, round sealed-beam headlamps were used. This could be because when the car was launched, in 1974, the American market did not allow European-style composite headlamps, and the only headlights available were round, since rectangular sealed beams weren’t available until 1975.
I’ve also heard that VW wanted to differentiate the car a bit from other rectangular-lamped hatchbacks, but that’s just rumor. Personally, I think the round lights actually make the Golf/Rabbit far more interesting looking up front. This seems counterintuitive since the whole car is so unashamedly rectilinear, but I think the way the round lights break the boundary of the grille offers a sort of playful visual punctuation, and gives the front end a sort of willing, alert appearance.
I mean, look at the rectangular-lamped version from 1979:

The car now looks…stern, or at least somewhat displeased. Yes, these lights technically are more harmonious, but I can’t help feel that something was lost with the removal of the round lamps. The rectangular ones almost fit too well, and as a result the front end loses some charm.
Now, conversely, we can look at the Renault 5/Le Car:

The initial US-Market Renault LeCars (the silly name given to the Renault 5 in America) used round sealed beams, from 1976 to 1979, and in 1980 those were replaced with rectangular lamps. In this case, I think the rectangular lamps work better, because, unlike the Golf/Rabbit, where the headlights broke some of the boundaries of the Golf’s very straight-edged front end with playful aplomb, in the case of the LeCar the round lights were simply stuffed into the rectangular bezels that housed the Euro version’s rectangular composite headlights.
This was a case where the lights weren’t cleverly interacting with the existing design, but rather were being forced into a context they were never meant to be. These lights looked and felt like a clumsy compromise, and when rectangular lights were fitted into the rectangular bezels in 1980, the LeCar’s face felt harmonious again.
This issue – cramming a round light into a square hole – I feel like comes up surprisingly often, and it almost never works. Take the Studebaker Avanti, for example. Original Avantis had wonderfully unabashedly round headlights:

Much like the VW Golf/Rabbit’s round headlights, these worked because of their contrast with the more linear forms of the rest of the car. But, after Studebaker passed onto the great factory in the sky, the Avanti lived on as the Avanti II, which for some reason featured round lights in rectangular chrome bezels:

That’s not an improvement! I’m not sure what the goal was there, exactly, but it just makes the front end look fussier and dowdier. Later neo-Avantis moved to rectangular headlamps, which was better than the round-in-chrome-squares of before, but still not great:

…and then eventually came all the way back to bold round headlamps:

Overall, I think the Avanti works better with round lamps, for reasons similar to the Golf/Rabbit.

The Chevette is yet another example of how round lights work best when not surrounded by square holes. The early Chevette face is a little friendlier, perhaps, but the later rectangular-lamped front end is much cleaner and works better with the overall design. Somehow, unlike the Rabbit/Golf, it doesn’t suffer from the stern/suspicious look issue, though I’m not sure I can pinpoint exactly why.
I think intent is important here, or perhaps something closer to acceptance? What I mean is that designs where a round light is appreciated as a round light and no attempts are made to shoehorn it into a design never really intended for a round light are the ones that tend to work. Really, the same goes for rectangular lamps: is the overall design one that appreciates the shape of the lights? Look at these Monte Carlos compared to the Golf/Rabbit:

When the Monte Carlo switched from round lights to quad stacked rectangular ones, the impression one gets is that the overall design was adapted to make those work; I get a sense that the designer was eager to try these new headlights. With the Golf/Rabbit, the switch feels more like an obligation, something done because one is expected to do it, and without passion.
Some round-to-rectangular changes are a little baffling, as in the famous case of the Citroën 2CV:

I’ve gotten used to the rectangular-lamp 2CVs but it does seem a pretty arbitrary choice; in a way it’s like the opposite of the Golf/Rabbit situation, only in this case rectilinear lights on a curvy car.

The Honda Accord is another interesting example of a car that tried both; of all of these, I think this one may be closest to a wash. I think it looks pretty damn good either way. The quad round lamps somehow manage to have a slightly sportier look, partially because of traditions involving using lights that were quick to change in rally contexts. But the rectangular ones do look pretty smart!
So what have we decided here? I think if there’s any takeaways, it’s that you can’t beat intention and enthusiasm when it comes to car design. If you have a round headlight, own that round headlight. Let the light define its space, don’t try and force it into another shape. Let it push against other elements of the design! And, conversely, harmony can work, too! Sometimes a rectangular lamp in a rectangular hole just feels right!
My point is, sealed-beam enthusiasts, it’s time to stop fighting. Put down the shrimp forks and chairs, and accept that you are all beautiful children of light, with so much to offer, all in your own brilliant ways.









Squares or GTFO. Cars look better square, trucks look better square, jeeps look better square, and motorcycles look better square.
Are you claiming it’s hip to be a square?
You might think I’m crazy but I don’t even care…
The stacked quad rectangular headlights were a crime that should have been punished violently. GM and Mopar did some serious butchery to some elegant for the time designs to shove a couple of ugly squares out front.
The LTD II was probably the only one to pull the look off decently. That’s only because the Elite/Torino sheet metal was completely (ish) changed for it.
I really think my round versus rectangular vs euro headlight opinions have changed during my life. When I was young everything was a round headlight. When rectangle headlights started coming in I thought they look great in everything they improved everything even the Jeep YJ. Now I look back that is the worst part of the ’80s. Jaguar xjs was one of those strange things where the Euro headlights just didn’t work as good as the older version it seems like maybe they even use every kind of shape in those cars . So I guess I don’t know I will have to take each vehicle on a Case by case basis.
No mention of the YJ Wrangler? That’s the one everybody complains about the most!
I like it b/c if it’s good enough for MacGyver, it’s good enough for me.
But I know it’s right up there with the ’94-’95 Mustang taillights, when Ford, gasp, went horizontal.
I was born just after the YJ was introduced and the Jeep community colllectively shit thier pants, so my first real experience seeing Jeeps was with the square lights. They’ve always been extremely handsome looking to me, but he touched on why this works in the article-the Jeep was designed around the square lights from the get-go.
Imagine a set of square lights on a JK, or circle lights on a ZJ grand Cherokee…..
Yuck.
Another example of Round – Rectangle – Round with successive models. The market has spoken: Wranglers need round headlamps like oatmeal cookies need raisins.
Disclosure: Former CJ5 and current TJ owner.
I yearned for all the interesting halogen headlights on European cars in my formative years. The rectangular sealed beams inserted into the Peugeot 505’s front end nearly broke my soul.
When the US got rectangular 4-lamp options, I liked the side-by-side orientation of some GM products, but the over/under arrangements like the ’76 Monte Carlo looked awful. And now some obnoxious version of Ford pickups echo it with obscenely bright LED units.
Perhaps a topic for another day… some folks on dual sport motorcycles are installing YELLOW auxiliary lights and even correctly aimed, they really do catch the eye. Especially in daytime. And that’s really the point of these, right?
I’ve read, and maybe these fights have already been fought before at High Beams, that yellow light is less prone to dispersion in wet atmospheres than today’s blue halogen and LED solutions.
Selective Yellow lights are awesome, especially in foul weather. The French had it right all along.
Everybody thinks whiter (or blue-whiter) light is brighter and easier to see by because it’s closer to daylight. But it also glares and reflects back badly. Selective yellow can be very bright and high-contrast with less glare and eyestrain.
VERY much agree. The best headlights I have ever had on a car were the Euro brick headlights with selective yellow bulbs on my Peugeot 505s. Better even than the all-singing/all-dancing HID headlights on my M235i and GTI even without being able to do all the moving around tricks those two cars could do. Those were great until it was raining, then they really kind of sucked.
Just a perfect wide even distribution of light with a nice long throw down the side of the road and absolutely minimal glare in four weather. I really miss those cars.
HID lights are not blue – they are stark white with a spike in the blue spectrum that gives them that blue tinge. Which leads people to think they are blue and do stupid things with halogens to make them look blue, which is terrible for vision.
Euro-spec Peugeot 505 headlights are absolutely fantastic, the best I have ever driven behind. I spent a TON of money over the years putting proper headlights in my cars in place of US-spec junk. Thankfully the onset of “converged” beam patterns than meet both specs “good enough” has made that mostly a thing of the past, though they aren’t as good as the old real deal.
Oh god, the 2000s and the introduction of aftermarket HIDs.
Soooo many “8000K” purple headlights burning my retinas. Often in a Chrysler 300 with shitty wheels.
Terrible, absolutely terrible, and should be an instant “fix-it” ticket.
Right to the crusher. Removing the driver is an optional step.
I like the cut of your jib!
And no driver removal allowed if it’s a jacked up truck with headlights at eye level.
The best headlights I’ve driven behind were the multi-lens LEDs on our 2018 Acura MDX. Incredibly sharp cutoff on low beams to not induce dazzle for oncoming traffic. But even on low beam, they lit things up pretty far down the road. That thing came with (defeatable) automatic high beam/low beam which, like the autosensing wipers were more annoying than helpful. Some things are best left to the driver.
As soon as I got my Mercedes W123, I bought a set of composite Euro headlights from eBay. Literally the same day.
Let me try one:
Round, round get around
I get around
vs.
Square, square are we there
I just don’t care
Round definitely wins.
I await the invitation of the Jeep(tm) Gang to dine at High Breams.
Who do you think started the brawl? 😉
Round vs square is a matter of what car they are on, but most of the time I’m gonna prefer round more often than not.
This is my take as well. There are certain vehicles where square headlights work, but generally I think round is superior.
Round headlamps for the Rabbit, for me, if only because the evolution of the entire car from the round headlights (cars manufactured in Germany) to the square headlights (cars manufactured in Westmoreland, PA.) was such a downgrade, it was sad.
I worked at a VW/Porsche/Audi specialist shop for 21 years (1982-2003), having extensive everyday hands-on interaction with both versions, and from all of the basic build and assembly materials themselves, to build quality, to fit and finish, NVH, you name it, the differences were night and day.
The basic running gear (engine, trans, fuel injection, etc.) were still sourced from Germany, but the entire car around that stuff, ugh! 🙁
Through the wondrous nature of chance, I have at least four motorcycles that were made in 1981.
It seems like 1981 marked a sort of transition from round to rect in the Japanese motorcycle market.
Round. The square headlights of the late 80’s-90’s MB SLs are a travesty.
Was going to say this, though the older European lights on the 1950s 300 and 190 sl and 1960s 230/250/280 sl are ok. Not square though.
I also prefer BMWs with round headlights and petite, chrome rimmed kidneys.
The only vehicle I have with a rectangular sealed-beam automobile headlight also has two round sealed-beam motorcycle headlights so I don’t know that I really want to get drawn into this fight:
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/55395279167_2bcf35286e_c.jpg
The Austin Allegro is an example of this, there’s no getting around the awkward compromises of the design that were required to fit the tall A-Series engine, however, the later HL and HLS variants of the Allegro 3 switched to quad round headlights that seemed to make the front end look lower, wider, and less blunt, alleviating some of the dumpyness of the standard single rectangular lights. Still didn’t win beauty contests, but it at least became more inoffensive
I replaced the Square sealed beams on my 1983 Toyota RN38 pickup with the round ones from a 79-81 version. That look was just classic.
I’d give my left nut for cars to go back to the elegant simplicity of sealed beams instead of GRRRRR ARRRRG Angry Grille with eye-mutilating LEDs.
Another mildly-interesting-to-me example: The third and fourth generations of Suzuki Alto (in Japan) both had rectangular and round headlight versions being made at the same time – rectangular headlights on the base models, and round headlights on the sportier Works models. Since the different models also had different front bumpers and hoods, the result looked intentional either way (IMO).
Makes me wonder how many other cars had contemporaneous round and rectangular headlight models…
Jaguar XJ40, for example.
Until 1982, the European version of the MB W123 had rectangular composite headlights for the 280/280 E and the Turbo Diesel exclusively while the more mundane models had two awkward round pegs in a rectangular hole, similar to the US sealed beam version.
https://media0.faz.net/image/w1200h627/bc7d6ed0084a/w2999h1566x0y350o/071980/1.10840847/dreigestirn-coup-limousine-und.webp
Pretty sure it depends on what the rest of the car looks like.
There could be some modern references in this article, like the new Landcruiser Prado variants or even the Honda Civic vs Mitsuoka M55
I’m generally in the it depends on the overriding style of the rest of the car camp.
The second gen Camaro is perfect with round ones because of its curvy body, and anything but square ones would have ruined the third gen.
So does the 2nd gen Firebird design work when it switched to quad squares in ’77?
I don’t think so, or rather, it would have looked better with round ones. But that’s nothing compared with the ’79 and its individuated squares.
That’s the best way to unlock the flavor!
No malt vinegar?!?! What kinda low-rent establishment are you frequenting here?
Regarding the question at hand, I have never liked the stacked, quad, rectangular headlight design on the Monte. There is just that weird, perturbing double-eye effect. For some reason, I don’t get the same uneasiness with side-by-side rectangular lights, as seen on the Accord. In fact, that is probably my favorite of the sealed-beam styles.
For the Chevette, unfortunately that one isn’t really an apples-to-apples as the grilles are totally different. I like the body color coming into the grille on the round-light Chevette, but round lights in the solid black grille wouldn’t work as well as the rectangular lights do.
Could be worse, they could be seasoning their fish with headlight fluid
My 1979 El Camino has two rectangular sealed-beam bulbs. In 1982, they switched to four smaller rectangular sealed beams. Which is better?
1979 El Camino
1982 El Camino
79
I see you have neatly avoided the headlight boondoggle that is the Volvo 240 series.
I think that’s covered by the round in a square hole comment?
While the 140 and 164 look handsome with round headlights because they were designed for them.
I’m probably in the minority but I always preferred a coffin-nose with the quad rectangles but that’s just probably due to when I came of age. I think they’re better than the late composite lamps which look too big and goofy.
I weirdly am on the opposite side of you, Torch, on some of these specific examples. I love both the Le Car and Chevette with the round lights in the square hole. They just make those cars look friendlier. But, on the Rabbit, I prefer the rectangular lamps since they are much more consistent with the overall rectangular theme of that car’s face. In general, though, I like round headlamps. They have an old-school feel and I’m generally nostalgic when it comes to cars.
Not sealed beam, but we have a modern day dilemma here as well with the new Toyota Land Cruiser.
They used square holes for the round headlight trim and I agree it doesn’t quite work.
How about cases where both headlight styles were available in the same year? The ’78 F-Series got round headlights on lower/work trim levels but rectangular on the higher ones.
This made absolutely no financial sense to me since they had to make headlight buckets and bezels for both shapes, but apparently Ford thought rectangular headlights were superior enough that customers would pay more for them. By ’79 they were standard across the board.
https://xr793.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/1978-Ford-Pickups.pdf
Aussie XC Falcon – base models had round, Fairmonts had square: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ford_Falcon_(XC)
Were the inner lights on the higher trim Cobras, etc. the high beams or were they driving lights? Because if you count those, the XC actually had 3 different headlight configurations available.
Driving lights – came with vented bonnet, full gauges etc on GS (Rally Pack) models, and special editions too.
Did Ford do this with the ’79 LTD as well?
Not round vs rectangular, but duals vs quad rectangulars.
I can’t imagine my TR6 or my CJ5 with anything other than round lights.