When approaching a car with high beams on, you should reduce your own glare by looking slightly to the right side of the road. This will help you maintain visibility while avoiding direct eye contact with the oncoming high beams. You can also adjust your speed to create more distance between you and the other vehicle, or flash your own high beams quickly to signal the other driver to dim theirs. If the glare persists, consider pulling over safely until the other vehicle passes.
1,000 feet.
You need to turn your high beams down and ,after the car passes, you may turn them back to high beams
Yes!
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.
Take your car in to have it checked. Turn signals should work without high beams.
As soon as you see a car directly in line towards you, you should go to low beam.
Flash your high beams quickly to remind the other driver to drop the high beams and if that doesn't work try to focus on the right side of the road.
Look to the side of the road at the white line (not the center).
High beams should only be used in extreme darkness and only when there is no other vehicle in your opposing lane. The reason behind this is because high beams can be blinding in the opposing lane and can and have lead to very serious accidents.Answer If your high beams were left of as on-coming traffic was approaching it would be blinding to the other driver. If you have your high beams on while in back of another car, it could also be blinding to the driver your following through side and rear view mirrors. Either way it is dangerous. If your high beams were left on constantly through - lets say a city - where lighting is good, the police officer may have determined that it was suspicious, and was checking to see if you were on alcohol or drugs.
It should either be on the dash board where you can turn your interior lights on or you should pull back on the directional to switch. Cars run with the low beams on and the high beams are switched to in the dark when you feel you need extra light. I feel bad for the people that have been coming in the other direction from this car if its high beams have been on constantly.
Look down to the right hand side and use the edge of the road as a guide. If you are MORE than 500 feet away from the car with it's high beams on, it IS legal to briefly "flash" your high beams on AND right back off. However, if you are LESS than 500 feet from the oncoming car, you could get a ticket for briefly turning your high beams on/off as a reminder-signal to the other driver to "turn off your high beams, buddy!"
you should look at the center of the road at the white line You can quickly flash your high beams to remind them that their highs are on.