You might be surprised. Many motorcycle driving lights draw 60W (5A). Denali D7 LED driving lights draw 10A. You can get cheap driving lights that draw less than 2A - is that what you want?
Staneric, the poster who asked the question prompting this thread,
already has the OE optional grill LED's on that particular accessory circuit, so it's probably not suffering from too much current draw just yet...

And
I have no idea
what Driving Lights
he might want to or even end up running, but in my post above (ie. in post #8, the one I posted in reply to you just a few minutes after your original warning about being mindful of the current draw...

) in the sentence immediately after that portion of my post #8 that you
did quote (so yeah, in the bit that you left out...) I mentioned:
.....
But if you're concerned about the current draw thru that circuit getting too high,
you could always just use it to trigger a relay for switching the lights on - that'd leave that fuse with minimal added load and let you draw the main power load for the lights straight off the battery.

hyea:
{my
emphasis added

}
By using that circuit to only provide power for a
trigger for an extra set of Driving lights which could then be run off a relay powered directly from the battery, it
might add
maybe as much additional draw to that circuit as 1 whole amp :shocked: ..... or maybe not that much at all?! :dontknow:
The point is, there's a
whole raft of ways to get around any concern or practical issues that
Staneric might have/see re adding another accessory to that particular circuit, which is clearly not carrying any majorly excessive load/current draw atm; one option being simply to use it to power a trigger for a relay powering extra lights he wants to add as previously mentioned, instead of powering the extra lights entirely via the accessory circuit, and thereby being
extremely unlikely to overload that circuit.... Simples really, & definitely not anything that's too hard to overcome &/or circumvent any issues that might arise due to any greater current draw, and certainly no more than the existing circuit &/or the wiring itself can handle. :thumbup: