looks good, a bit too much glare but still good. Also $700 is a bit much. For $800 you can stop over at
http://www.illusion-lighting.com (no affiliation) and he'll install a set of DOT projectors in your housing with DOT hid with a light output that no reflector can match.
then you get this as a beam pattern
click on a pic for the big picture
this is a 98 accord with projector retrofit(for $700)
another 98

Notice the cutoff on the wall(a reflector will never get this performance)
and for those who want the best(and can shell out $1400) these are ECE proectors
or you can always do what I'm in the middle of doing which will run you about $350 if you're ver, and I mean very very, comfortable with hacking up a set of headlight housings , pick up some hella 90mm h9 low beam projectors from
http://www.rallylights.com for $100 then get an OEM HID setup off of ebay for $250 with ballast and d2s bulbs and whack away at your housings for this look(I'm using the lvq-212 ballast that came with my old retrofit, putting on the P32-d connectors and using philips 4300k d2s that I got off of ebay, so this adventure is only costing me $180)
no thumbnails so I'll just put a link
http://members.rogers.com/hid/pix/update/10Hidfin.jpg
http://members.rogers.com/hid/pix/update/03Hidfin.jpg
Sorry I'm a convert, I spent quite a while with HID in the reflector housing and am just sick of the hotspots in the beam and the glare, and the more I looked at friends with the similar crappy upgrade, the more I knew there had to be something better, and not necessarily expensive. and I found it here
http://faq.auto.light.tripod.com/ Also, see_fu is the owner of
http://www.illusion-lighting.com/, and he's a very respected lighting guru, he does some fantastic work if you don't know how or don't feel like doing the conversion yourself. Personally unless you "really" know what you're doing See_Fu won't let you down. His work and craftsmanship is impecible. You might be able to get a relatively clean job doing it yourself if you're a hacking guru, but He's done so many of them it's no longer an art, but a skill.