It depends on the vehicle. Manufacturers try to minimise blind spots.
Not likely.
1) No road signs 2) Talking to someone in the phone while driving 3) Drunk (common) 4) Slippery roads
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.
It is quite likely it is the anti-lock brakes activating. When any wheel loses traction while braking the brakes will be pulsed so that the car will not go into a slide. When driving on slippery roads, you are suppose to pulse your brakes to stop. The antilock system does this for you.
To prevent the dangerous situation of oil on tires while driving, regularly check and maintain your vehicle's engine and fluid levels to prevent leaks. Additionally, avoid driving over oil spills on the road and drive cautiously in wet or slippery conditions to reduce the risk of losing traction.
I'massuming you mean "pens". The red spots would likely be jelly from the service rack ffrom a worker contaminating the pen or marker while serving.
You can but it will be slippery
No. However, if an accident results while you're eating and driving, you'll likely be considered a negligent operator, and be charged accordingly.
There are many reasons as to why a car may lose power while driving. However, the most likely cause is a bad fuel pump. This causes the car to 'think' that there is not any gas, so it begins to stall, and eventually stalls while driving.
most likely. 65;
Where? I would most likely say in the car. Or possibly at a golf course.