When parking uphill with a curb, position your tires so they are turned away from the curb. This will help prevent your car from rolling into the street if the brakes fail.
When parking uphill, tires should be turned away from the curb.
Yes, when parking uphill, you should turn your tires away from the curb.
When parking uphill with a curb, the tires should be turned away from the curb.
When parking uphill with a curb, turn the tires away from the curb and towards the street to prevent the vehicle from rolling.
When parking uphill with a curb, turn the tires away from the curb and towards the street to prevent the vehicle from rolling. This is known as "curb your wheels."
Yes, when parking uphill, you should turn your tires away from the curb.
When parking uphill, tires should be turned away from the curb.
When parking uphill with a curb, the tires should be turned away from the curb.
Left. Or, away from the curb.
When parking uphill with a curb, turn the tires away from the curb and towards the street to prevent the vehicle from rolling.
When parking uphill with a curb, turn the tires away from the curb and towards the street to prevent the vehicle from rolling. This is known as "curb your wheels."
So back of tire will roll onto curb
When parking on a hill that slopes downward, you should turn the front tires towards the curb or edge of the road to prevent the vehicle from rolling into traffic.
The tires should be turned so if the car rolls, it will hit the curb. This is so it will not roll out of control down the hill.
turn your wheel to the curb and pull your hand brake on and leave it in gear
set the parking brake, turn off the ignition switch and put the vehicle in low gear if your transmission is standard, and park, if it is automatic. The wheels should not be over twelve inches from the curb.
Front tires should be pointed toward traffic. That way, if the parking brake became disengaged, the car would not roll downhill into traffic, but would instead be stopped by the tires running into the curb.