When you remove the drl. Use a test light to determine where to hook up a short jumper wire. Then your high beam indicator light will work.
You will burn out your bulbs running both at the same time.
A better solution would be to upgrade your wiring harness from like 22 gauge wire to 10 or 12 gauge wire. Run straight from power box using a relay powered by the existing head light harness. You will have to remove the drl for this. This alone will give you way brighter head lights and gives you the option of running high wattage glass and bulbs.
I was playing around tonight and just ran a 10 ga jumper directly from the battery to the backside of the headlight connector plug (temporarily of course). I couldn't believe the difference in increased light output from that alone. I will definitely be upgrading the harness soon. Oh, no need to remove the DRL module for this mod.
Back to running high and low at the same time, the main reason I want to do this is to still have a low beam pattern while the highs are on on.
Although I read the bulbs will prematurely fail if both are on at the same time, what about the older vehicles that still maintained low beams when the highs were on? No possible way to run H4's in the older stuff?
I bought my new lights at Modern and while speaking to Drew, he said he has been running same setup (IPF housings with PIAA bulbs) in his JK and older Broncos for years without failure. Now while I'm not 100% positive, I'm relatively certain the 69 Bronco (with stock wiring) will have both lows and highs on at the same time.
I may just try it and see what happens, worst case, it will cost me new bulbs I guess.