They drive on the left side of the road and they sit towards the midline of the road. That places the steering wheel on the right side.
Like most of the world, France has traffic driving on the right side of the road, so the steering wheel would be on the left side of the car. Some countries (notably the UK, Ireland, Japan, Australia, South Africa, India and Pakistan) have traffic driving on the left side of the road, so they have steering wheels on the right side of the car. Occasionally, you might see a visiting UK car, with right side drive, in Paris.
The UK drives on the left side of the road and cars normally have the steering wheel on the right side of the vehicle.
The Spanish as most people in the world, drive on the left side of the car, the countries thaT drive on the right had side are UK, Japan, Hong Kong, Australia, and maybe two or more, but in Europe every one drives on the left hand side of the car.
The Right. Although you may see left hand cars occasionally for various reasons
Steering wheel covers are legal in the UK. However certain types of covers (especially cheaper products) will slip on the wheel. This can drastically reduce your ability to control the car. Using a cover that slips would constitute driving without due care and attention.
On a UK Spec car it is located just below the steering wheel behind a plastic blind.
just change it from keyboard to keyboard and steering wheel and then calibrate your wheel and pedals in settings easy.
There are no restrictions on left-hand drive car ownership in the UK. All foreign registered cars do have to be registered with the DVLA, with the exception of EU nationals driving EU registered cars for up to 6 months.
i don't think you can do that in the UK try Belgium and I'm looking as well forget about UK the mechanic here they will slutter you i seen it done there but do it for something that deserve it
In the US and many other countries the drivers side is left side, in the UK, and other countries, the driver sits on the right. You always look from the "behind the wheel" viewpoint.
The right side of a car is always on the right looking from the rear to the front. What does change is the nearside and off side depending on the country you are in. In the UK the nearside is the left (nearest the kerb) in countries that drive on the right the nearside is on the right.
Turn your steering wheel to the left if you are driving on the right hand side of the road, such as in the US and most of Europe. If you drive on the left side of the road, such as in the UK or Japan, turn your steering wheel to the right. Either way you want the nose of your vehicle to lead you away from the curb if you were to accelerate.