True.
Not sure if you are talking about a vehicle for a disabled person or a vehicle that is disabled on the side of the road. If its the former then there are no special lights. If its the latter then the hazard lights on the vehicle will either be amber in the front and rear or amber in the front and red in the rear. Most vehicles the hazards are amber in the front and rear though
It is not illegal to run through amber traffic lights if they are the flashing amber lights. Amber lights that occur just before red lights are not illegal to run through, but caution should be observed. A sudden burst of speed to get through the light could cause an accident.
If it's a state or county vehicle doing road repairs then flashing lights are to be on but should not be red - they should be amber and/or clear.Added: Red (or blue) flashing lights are reserved for use on authorized emergency response vehicles only (i.e.: police - fire/rescue - ambulance).
You would have to remove the red lenses and replace them with amber ones. Then you would get a ticket for improper lights.
All UK lights go as follows: ... GREEN AMBER RED RED and AMBER GREEN ... NOTE: AMBER is a colour very close to orange, usually called YELLOW in the US.
It's the head lights only.
Yes, all clearance lights have to be amber. The only exception would be on the back of a trailer. Not the tail lite, but the light on the side of the tail light. This has to be red.
Amber
Main reason is colorblindness alert,then is what the law enforcement has adopted from the beginning of time,on vehicles:blue stands for law enforcement,red is for emergency vehicles (including police cruisers),yellow caution...and green is for security officers. Blue/red police. Red/yellow fire/ems.Green/amber for Security officers. As all traffic lights are designed to be useful on both normal eye and color blind humans so are the emergency vehicles lights.
Amber
An amber gambler is an idiomatic term for someone who accelerates when traffic lights change from green to amber, instead of stopping, hoping that no other vehicle will cross their path.
GA law addreeses only amber, red, and blue lights. With that being said, no. It is legal to have clear/white lighting on your vehicle, but it does not designate your vehicle as an emergency vehicle.Note that it is best to just get an amber permit and use amber or amber and clear lights, using just white can generally appear to be blue in some conditions.See below link: