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Well, assuming that you are talking about headlights, the low beams are the dimmest settings for the drive headlights, while high beams are the brightest setting.
Low-beam headlights that are not property adjusted can make them as bright as high-bead headlights. They also can cause you to not see the full road ahead.
Low beam headlights and fog lights if the vehicle has fog lights.
you should be able to buy akit from your local motor factors and fit them to your headlights to redirect the beam hope this helps.
High beam headlights reveal objects at a distance of at least 450 feet away. High beam headlights allow the driver to view obstacles in the road much sooner than low beam headlights.
All vehicles are required to have low- and high-beam headlamps. If your low-beam headlamps both fail after dark, try switching to high beam. If the high beams don't work either, switch on the emergency flashers. In either case, get the car out of traffic and off the road as quickly as safely possible.
Use your high-beam headlights at night whenever it is legal and safe.
You use low beam headlights when you're in a town or city in any location.
On most vehicles, the low beam headlights are the outside pair of lights. This is true when the headlights are side by side. When the two sets of lights are stacked, the low beam headlights are usually on the bottom.
Car headlights have to be able to "dip" so as not to dazzle oncoming traffic, they therefore can switch between a "high" beam and a "dipped" beam and thus have a dual beam.
Use your high-beam headlights at night whenever it is legal and safe.
Low beam headlight should illuminate 85 feet of the roadway. Newer low beam headlights illuminate more of the road than older headlights.