No, it is not. Every state or province has laws requiring every vehicle to be equipped with low beam and high beam headlamps, and requiring the use of low beam headlamps, not high beams, when you are within a specified distance of a vehicle in front of you—usually around 500 feet from an oncoming car, 200 feet from a leading car. There is no exception for faulty equipment. Operating a vehicle with faulty equipment is a violation, and so is improper use of high beam headlamps.
If your low beams stop working, obviously you should not hesitate to switch to high beams to light your way off the road safely. But you don't get to just drive around on high beams for nights and weeks and months until you decide to get around to fixing the low beams!
what do you think dick head
if it has turn signals and a head light horn
with a LASER and light sensor in the drive head.
Unless it was installed stock in the Factory, No.
Yes. Yamaha IT's used to be street legal, but since they only have a head light, and a tail light they are no longer street legal. The rule now is that you need to also have a speedometer, and blinkers added on.
Mercy Drive - Burn in my light
http://www.chp.ca.gov/html/streetlegal.html I would interpret this as; the head lights are legal as long as the bulb produces white light and not blue or yellow.
No. All lights that were manufactured with the car. and/or that are installed on the car, must be operational.
Check with your state rules, but here in Kansas at age 14 you can legally drive any scooter (motorcycle "whatever you wanna call it") as long as it is 49cc or less. Also you have to have all street vehicle features such as: head lights, turn signals, brake light.. etc.
A comet's tail is formed when the Sun's radiation and the pressure of light drive the very thin gases and very small particles that form the head of a comet away from the head.
There is NO interesting " FACTS " about the " Head light! "
The access time for a moving head disc drive is greater than that of a fixed head disc drive due to the physical movement required by the read/write head to reach the desired location on the disk. In a moving head drive, the head needs to physically move across the disk's surface to access different sectors, resulting in increased latency. In contrast, a fixed head drive has multiple heads dedicated to specific locations on the disk, allowing for quicker access times as the heads do not need to physically move.