Tony, 0.5 volt drop is excessive. New vehicles may have neglible drop in the wiring, switches & connectors etc, but as they undergo ageing, the situation worsens. I would go the whole hog in this one, upgrade the wiring to the lights, fit circuit breakers & relays, renew the head lamp plugs, and ensure that all connectors are soldered. Blade terminals are good for about 15-20A max, so if your current draw is approaching that limit, either go for a screw terminal relay, or split the circuit into two circuits, say make high beam into left & right high beam. That way you have some redundancy and dont overload the connections. in my experience, relay contacts in a quality relay will take a load all the way up to their rating, but the connections are the weak link as surface area of the crimped connector socket tends to be limited and this causes heat to be generated through limited contact area causing a high resistance. if you must use crimped and/or soldered terminals,use harder brass ones rather than soft copper crimps as copper tends to lose its tension as it heats up and the amount of heat generated by a 15A current through the avaerage crimped connector is considerable, enough to looosen it and exacerbate the problem. I do this stuff for a living and I've seen a good bit of this sort of thing. I adopt the above approach and i never have these problems.
Yes, you can use the "Premium" type globes, but all that does is sort of hide the problem, and delay its onset. If you use the "premium" globes after you have completed the mods, you will get your money's worth out of them, especially if it means you dont have to upgrade your alternator to obtain brighter lights.
Doug