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Look at headlight lenses, if they are all clowdy, low beams will be dim and high beams will help Look at headlight lenses, if they are all clowdy, low beams will be dim and high beams will help Look at headlight lenses, if they are all clowdy, low beams will be dim and high beams will help
You must dim your high-beams if you're within 500 feet of an approaching car and dim your high-beams within 300 feet of the vehicle you follow.
150 meters
500 meters
The rule of the road is to flash your high beams to remind them to turn their high beams off.
High beams are the "bright" setting of your headlights. The reason they are sometimes referred to as "high beams" is because when they are on high beam or bright setting, the lights are directed straight out, instead of a bit more downwards as they are on "low beam" or "dim".
Your headlights may not dim because you don't have dimmer lights. Dimmer lights can blow and leave you with just the high beams.
Dispite when it's sunny out...When others cars pass. It's polite.
The traffic laws vary as to distance in almost ALL states. The reasonable answer is this - - If you can see the lights of the oncoming car, then he can see you and is probably being blinded by your high beams. Dim them whenever you can see oncomiong traffic.
sounds like you have a short in the low and hgh beam switch take it to auto electrician
the dim light has a bad ground. it is using the high beems of both lights as the ground. this leads to a voltage drop of about 7 volts on the dim light. then the high beem grounds through the driving lights of a lesser wattage and this leaves a voltage drop of only 3 volts at light so the light seems not to be on but it is , just very very dim. ck your ground going to the dim light!
It is perfectly legal to drive with high beams on, as long as you dim them when required by local law.