150 meters
500 feet if the vehicle is coming to you, 300 feet if you are following it.
Within 500 feet of oncoming traffic.
When you are within 500 feet of an oncoming vehicle or you come up behind a vehicle.
500
At night a driver should dim his headlights when an oncoming motor vehicle comes within 1,000 feet. You should switch your headlights from full beam to dipped beam when a oncoming car passes. It is unsafe to leave your headlights on full beam as it blinds the driver of the oncoming car.
At night a driver should dim his headlights when an oncoming motor vehicle comes within 1,000 feet. You should switch your headlights from full beam to dipped beam when a oncoming car passes. It is unsafe to leave your headlights on full beam as it blinds the driver of the oncoming car.
500ft if it's oncoming. 350ft if you're coming up behind someone.
A quarter mile. If not correct answer - change the law. California law states - Your high beams have to be dimmed within 300 feet of following another driver and within 500 feet of an oncoming driver.
Think of it this way, when you see a vehicle. more then likely it sees you, so try to lower the high beams as soon you realize another vehicle is infront of you. The law in Oregon is 350 feet.
At night a driver should dim his headlights when an oncoming motor vehicle comes within 1,000 feet. You should switch your headlights from full beam to dipped beam when a oncoming car passes. It is unsafe to leave your headlights on full beam as it blinds the driver of the oncoming car.
200 feet
500 feet.