the 30-50% power. Standard BMW high beam lamps are 55W, two of them mean 110 W, that represent a total operating load of 1.3 ohm. "Something in line to reduce the power" would be a
.7 ohm power resistor (I would use a D50K1R0-ND), that would reduce lamp power to about 42%. But the heat dissipated by that resistor would correspond to about 25 wats. Pretty hot, not to be installed in the dashboard, but near the radiator fan. A chopping electronic circuit may be more efficient, also more complicated to put together if you don't know how to. Don't know either its effect in the lamp life.
To set together your project in case you desire this heat generator under your hood, you will need the resistor and two relays (one of them need to be 5 pin), this is the connecting table (draw it so you can see what is going on):
-Relay #1 coil + (86) wired to Relay #2 contact NC (87a)
-Relay #2 contact com. (30) wired to Fuse F2 output (power in run and start)
-Relay #1 coil - (85) wired to ground
-Relay #2 coil + (86) wired to Light switch pin 3 (Tap Yellow wire in socket, it is Low beam on signal to turn off DRL, if you want turn off for park & lows, use light switch pin 4 by taping Yellow/Violet wire in socket)
-Relay #2 coil - (85) wired to ground
-Relay #1 contact com. (30) wired to LKM pin 2 (Tap red wire in socket, it is permanent power)
-Relay #1 contact NO (87) wired to resistor pin one
-Resistor center pin wired to fuse F13 input (Tap White/Red wire in socket, it is High beams feed)
Set resistor to about 0.7 ohm, re adjust slightly for lights brilliance required.
Relay #1 is DRL (turn on reduced power High Beams with ignition key)
Relay #2 is DRL off when Low Beams (Or Lows & Park if selected)
Javier