The major blind spot is the offside that is the passenger side. Mirrors used to be mounted at the front of the wing giving a wide view of dangers in that area. They were also convex enough to give a wide view. Mirrors are usually now door mounted and less convex meaning danger slightly away from the car in that area cannot be seen on the mirror. Also the driver has to move his sightline farther than for a wing mirror and may have a frontal collision in the fraction of a second he is looking in the mirror..
A less dangerous spot is to the rear particularly if the boot lid is horizontal. This makes it common to back into a low obstruction.
Hopefully the problem will be solved with the advent of cheap web type cameras, and proximity warnings.
It depends on the vehicle. Manufacturers try to minimise blind spots.
the blind spots
When you are driving behind a truck and you can't see the truck driver's mirrors, you are in his blind spot.
The blind spots are the areas outside of your car in between the view of your rear-view mirror and your side mirrors that you cannot observe without physically turning around to see.
Blind spots when driving are the areas around a vehicle that the driver cannot see either while facing forwards or by checking their mirrors. Typically, the blind spots are located to the rear left and right of a vehicle. Larger vehicles, such as lorries, have much wider blind spots than smaller vehicles such as cars. To find the blind spots on your car, watch another car approach you in your mirrors until it comes into your field of vision, there may be a point where you cannot see the car at all and that would mean it is in one of your blind spots.
do you have any blind spots?
Blind side driving refers to operating a vehicle while relying on mirrors or limited visibility, particularly when the driver cannot see certain areas around the vehicle, such as the blind spots. This term is often used in the context of commercial driving, where large trucks have significant blind spots that can pose safety risks. It emphasizes the importance of being aware of these blind areas and using additional techniques, like checking over the shoulder, to ensure safe maneuvering. Proper training and awareness are crucial to minimize accidents related to blind side driving.
no, not being able to see it in your mirrors is the definition of a blind spot while driving, that is why you turn your head and check
That depends on what you are driving. On most cars there is all 4 corners. There is also a major blind spot where the rear view mirror is. Don't ever hang anything off the rear view mirror.
blind spots
We have blind spots because part of the retina in our eye do not have light sensitive cells. Fortunately, we are not aware of our blind spots because the blind spots of our two eyes do not coincide.
Driving Blind was created in 1997.