its how the car is made some times they don't have enough room to fish the rubber line up through all the stuff that is in the way so its easier to put it on the other side!
The cars in Germany have the steering wheel on the left side.
Yes. Yes, drivers in Ireland (North & South) drive on the left. The only difference between the two are the road signs. The signs in the Irish Republic use kilometers (metric) for distances and speed limits, while the signs in the North (UK) use miles (imperial).
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In Italy, people drive on the right side of the road. So cars made to be used in Italy - or any other right-side-traffic country - have the steering wheel on the LEFT side, to put the driver closer to the middle of the road. The only regular exception are cars imported from left-side markets and some delivery vans etc.
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Cars in Northern Ireland drive on the left hand side of the road.
Cars in France are left hand drive (traffic drives on the right hand side of the road)
The flow of traffic is on the left-hand side of the road, but vehicles with the drivers controls on either the left or the right are lawful.
We drive on the left, so use rhd cars.
In US cars (which drive on the right), the right side of the car is the passenger's side. In the UK and other places (where they drive to the left), the right side is where the driver sits.
Place 3 pots in the middle at the bottom next to each other. Place the 4th pot directly under the shortest tap. Onthe left tap place a down/right right/up, up/right and a straight. On the right tap place a down/left, left/up, up/left
right side of car is passenger side...left is driver But in some cars, driver seat is on the other side of the car. Sit behind the steering wheel, right is on your right.