Look to the side of the road at the white line
Look to the side of the road at the white line
Use your high-beam headlights at night whenever it is legal and safe.
Use your high-beam headlights at night whenever it is legal and safe.
No, you should not use high-beam headlights at all in heavy fog.
Low beam headlight should illuminate 85 feet of the roadway. Newer low beam headlights illuminate more of the road than older headlights.
When approaching a car using high-beam lights, you should dim your headlights to low beam to avoid blinding the oncoming driver. This is not only courteous but also a traffic safety regulation in many areas. If the other vehicle does not dim their lights, maintain your focus on the road ahead to avoid glare. Always be aware of your surroundings and adjust your speed accordingly.
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.
low beam
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.
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Dim headlights form high beam to low beam