T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
923.1 | | NCEIS1::CHEVAUX | Patrick Chevaux, Nice, 828-6995 | Mon Jan 15 1990 13:51 | 3 |
| Fully agree with you John. Too much is no better than too little.
I still maintain that rear fog lights are only useful during the
day.
|
923.3 | | CURRNT::SAXBY | Isn't it 5.30 yet? | Mon Jan 15 1990 13:56 | 13 |
|
Dazzling lights are WORSE than no lights. It becomes impossible
to see the line of the road or cyclists or poorly lit vehicles (or
parked ones!) when you have lights which are too bright coming towards
you. This is especially bad when the road is mucky (salted or damp
after a storm) and your windscreen gets covered in muck, which you
can't clean off.
There are laws about it, but like so many others they never get
enforced!
Mark
|
923.5 | | SUBURB::PARKER | | Mon Jan 15 1990 17:47 | 12 |
| There is a definition of how much diminution of visibility the rear
fogs should be used in - I think it is 100 yards (or maybe 100 of
these new fangled foreign things). I judge whether I can see the
traffic in front without the high intensity lamps. If I can't, I
switch them on. When I can again, I switch them off.
Some of the dash warning lamps are invisible from the drivers seat,
and I suspect that some lamps legitimately switched on just get
forgotten.
Steve
|
923.6 | A bit of help from the manufacturers please? | SHAPES::MACMILLANR | F U N E X N M ? ... S, V F X N M. | Mon Jan 15 1990 19:37 | 16 |
| Another reason for lights getting left on...
In some cars the fog ligh indicator lights are very bright (so you
can't ignore them), but this is a problem as they are distractingly
bright. In two cars that I have bought the bulb was removed to stop
it glaring in the corner of the previous owners eyes... so at night you
had to look at the switch with a light, or feel it.
I wish manufacturers would put in sensible indication lights in these
situations so that people didn't need to remove the bulbs to stop them
being distracted.
PS The two cars were both minis.
Rob
|
923.7 | automatic 'off' | IOSG::MITCHELL | Elaine | Tue Jan 16 1990 07:58 | 4 |
|
On the Maestros, the fog light switch is 're-set' when the ignition
is switched off, so there is no problem with fog lights being left on
from the previous trip. I think this is a good idea.
|
923.8 | | CHEFS::CLEMENTSD | Public Sector and Telecomms | Tue Jan 16 1990 09:14 | 8 |
| a few back was a typical paranoid response, but tempered by the
sequel which was an accurate summary of what to do with rear fog
lights...... switch them on when they are needed and off when they
are not. They are needed (according to Govt literature) in heavy
rain and fog. This must be one of the few times that HMG has got
it right. A bigger danger is poorly adjusted headlights and an even
bigger danger to all road users is the idiot that's driving too
fast for the conditions prevailing.
|
923.9 | Isn't that a motor bike, oh shiiiii... | IJSAPL::CAMERON | Yesterday was worse than tomorrow | Tue Jan 16 1990 09:30 | 15 |
|
Re. .8
I would echo the sentiment that poorly adjusted headlights are a
nuisance and can be very dangerous. It's quite alarming the number
of cars with one headlamp that is badly ouy of alignment or doesn't
work at all. A car with the offside headlamp 'gone' can be
extremely hazardous at night and in poor visiblity is almost an
accident waiting to happen.
Over here you HAVE to carry spare bulbs, ( and fuses, and a warning
triangle ) by law. Is this the case in the U.K. yet ?, I doubt it, but
it would be good idea.
Gordon
|
923.10 | Not the law as such..... | IOSG::THOMPSONR | with an IQ of a demented grape..... | Tue Jan 16 1990 10:09 | 7 |
| I believe it isn't actually law in England to carry spare bulbs, but it
is illegal immediately when any of the lights stop working. If you get
caught you will be in trouble NO MATTER WHAT YOUR REASON is - so in other
words it is really best to carry spare bulbs in case a bulb goes during a
journey.
Ruth.
|
923.11 | It aint the Lombard RAC guys!!!! | WARNUT::YATES | Turbcharged for perfection... | Tue Jan 16 1990 11:15 | 9 |
| I still agree with the foglight argument...they're nothing but a pain
in the neck, and besides, very very very few drivers have any idea
whatsoever how to use them PROPERLY! Driving on Britain's motorways is
nothing short of downright dangerous nowdays...
Let's try and restrict the number of lights these pillocks fit to their
car!
Mark
|
923.13 | One man's slow is another man's suicidal! | CURRNT::SAXBY | Isn't it 5.30 yet? | Tue Jan 16 1990 11:35 | 8 |
|
> Before you say i'm going too fast please note that i'm slowing down
> for oncoming traffic and moving over. 3 times I've had wing mirrors
What? Into double figures you mean? :^)
Mark
|
923.14 | not to mention the deer waiting to jump out! | IOSG::MITCHELL | Elaine | Tue Jan 16 1990 11:51 | 5 |
|
With ref to driving well away from the hedge, this is a good idea, IF
you are aware of the traffic around you, and move over when necessary.
There are some huge potholes, and chunks of collapsed road, which won't
do the suspension any good at all!
|
923.15 | No to mention SQUASHING! | WARNUT::YATES | Turbcharged for perfection... | Tue Jan 16 1990 12:13 | 8 |
|
Is warp factor X such a sensible speed to be doing on these roads??
What about the Rabbits and the frogs you'll be frightening??
:-)
Mark
|
923.16 | | SWEEP::ALFORD | ...all civilisation began with beer. | Tue Jan 16 1990 12:47 | 8 |
|
Re: .14
.....including bicycles, horses, pedestrians, etc that insist on using the
bit of road nearest the hedge :-)
it's less hazardous to ones heart to leave a gap !
|
923.18 | | SWEEP::ALFORD | ...all civilisation began with beer. | Tue Jan 16 1990 12:53 | 7 |
|
you mean you don't give way to snails ????????????
where's the RSPCA ?
:-)
|
923.19 | | VANILA::LINCOLN | Reality is not what it seems | Tue Jan 16 1990 13:58 | 9 |
| The very real and serious problems snails face on our
roads today are so often ignored.
All the general public ever want to do is sink back into
their shells and make jokes on the subject, ignoring the
fact that no snail has made it from one side of the M4 to
the other since 1972, when it was opened to traffic.
-John
|
923.20 | Does this really count? Ask Norris MacWhirter? | BRIANH::NAYLOR | Purring on all 12 cylinders | Tue Jan 16 1990 15:38 | 5 |
| Re .19
this is rumoured to no longer be true as one enterprising snail ascended the
ramp onto the M25 and went with the flow of traffic for a day or so thereafter
descending safely on the other side.
|
923.21 | But do the snails carry foglights? | SUBURB::PARKER | | Wed Jan 17 1990 10:17 | 1 |
|
|
923.22 | | YARD::SAXBY | Isn't it 5.30 yet? | Wed Jan 17 1990 10:19 | 6 |
|
Re .21 Snails and foglights.
Only those born after 1984!
Mark
|
923.23 | (;^) | FNYTC6::PELLATT | Conan the chain-store fugitive | Wed Jan 17 1990 10:47 | 7 |
| don't know about crossing the M4, but most of 'em, seem to end
up in the centre lane of the M25, thereby causing Terry and Sharon
to stay below 15 mph in order to avoid them.
Pah, squash 'em all ( especially CLOCs )
Dave
|
923.24 | plonker in daddys car alert.. | SHAPES::STREATFIELDC | WIZARD STUFF | Wed Jan 17 1990 11:09 | 11 |
|
Seen on A303 this morning,
Weather: dry as a bone,
visibility: The sun was out!
Some plonker in a Corrado was going along with main beam, fog front,
and fog rear, all blazing into the sunrise.
Perhaps it was an avenging snail in disguise......
|
923.25 | Don't take no s**t! | IOSG::THOMPSONR | with an IQ of a demented grape..... | Wed Jan 17 1990 11:15 | 6 |
| Back to the hedges and gutter problem, I've found that if you 'stand
your ground' from early on before actually meeting the other car and
use all your side of the road and show no signs of pulling in, the other
car pulls in to their side of the road. This is a tip I picked up from the
defensive driving course and it seems to work quite well. Even the
snails are impressed......
|
923.27 | | VANILA::LINCOLN | Reality is not what it seems | Wed Jan 17 1990 13:16 | 15 |
| Narrow country lanes are essentially the places where the
non-yuppy bashed up old wreck brigade get their revenge.
In a battle of will over ownership of the wider line it's
inevitably the vulnerability level that counts most (or
lack of it).
Trucks and landrovers are tops followed by Mk1 Granadas etc.
Derek Mitchell's Maestro seems to be pretty well up too.
I know this is true a snail told me, he also said that it's
a little known fact that a snail still holds the record for the
rush hour circum-navigation of the M25.
-John
|
923.28 | Your Car, The Law, And Snails | RUTILE::BISHOP | | Wed Jan 17 1990 14:24 | 7 |
| RE : Snails.
I read somewhere that any snail caught with a light out WILL be
in trouble. Hence the crunching sound when running over one -
the breaking of the glass from the spare bulbs ! ;-)
|
923.29 | Get a Volvo ... | BRIANH::NAYLOR | Purring on all 12 cylinders | Wed Jan 17 1990 17:01 | 1 |
| and own the WHOLE road!
|
923.30 | Yum Yum !!! | SHAPES::GALVINS | Steven GALVIN @UCG, DTN:781-4393 :-) | Wed Jan 17 1990 17:44 | 4 |
| At least snails have some form of protection. It's the slugs I feel
sorry for!!!
Steven
|
923.31 | Slugs are just nudist snails. | SUBURB::PARKER | | Thu Jan 18 1990 09:49 | 1 |
|
|
923.32 | Yum Yum ? | SHAPES::GALVINS | Steven GALVIN @UCG, DTN:781-4393 :-) | Thu Jan 18 1990 18:06 | 1 |
| Does this mean that a slug tastes the same as a snail?
|
923.33 | Perhaps the snails should buy a fleet of Volvos! | WARNUT::YATES | Turbcharged for perfection... | Fri Jan 19 1990 11:25 | 1 |
|
|
923.34 | lights in the morning | SHAPES::YATESA | work hard, play hard | Fri Jan 19 1990 11:56 | 11 |
| Are there giudlines when headlamps should be switched on/off. I don't
mean when it is foggy or heavily raining but more in the morning. I
quite often see cars with their lights on when I think them to be
unneccessary, I have also been flashed by these people because mine
aren't on. They can't be warning me that because my lights aren't that
I'm not easily seen - they saw me to flash me.
I usually go by the street lights, if there're on then so are my
lights, if there're not on then I switch off.
Tony
|
923.35 | Obviously flashing a "snail warning" to you 8-) | BRIANH::NAYLOR | Purring on all 12 cylinders | Fri Jan 19 1990 12:12 | 0 |
923.36 | If in doubt, put your dipped headlights on. | VANDAL::BROWNM | | Fri Jan 19 1990 12:34 | 6 |
| The guy who runs the High Performance Course that Bill Betts et al endorse
wrote a few pieces in Motor a couple of years ago and his philosophy is to
be the first to turn his lights on. This seems pretty sensible to me.
Mike.
|
923.37 | It's a sixth sense :-) | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | | Fri Jan 19 1990 12:34 | 16 |
| Re: .34: Street lights aren't much of a guide, since they're usually
on timers. Really, you develop an instinct for when lights should be
on. This time of year around 8-9 in the morning, light levels are
usually below the threshold when I "know" my lights should be on. I
have dipped main beams where traffic is far enough apart to maintain
a useful speed, though usually I only have my dim-dips on during the
first 20-30 minutes crawling through Newbury's traffic jams.
My rule of thumb is this: if I see someone indicate, and the light
level is such that the flashing light draws my attention to it, rather than
me just being aware of it, then lights should be on.
Another way to be sure is if you notice cars with lights on more easily
than those without.
Jeff.
|
923.38 | Glimmerers in the gloom | SUBURB::PARKER | | Fri Jan 19 1990 12:40 | 13 |
| Tony,
Lighting up times are issued for each day by the DoT, and published
in the papers. However, the Highway Code says something like, "Lights
should be used when visibility is reduced". I use lights of some
kindwhenever there is less than good daylight visibility - usually
sidelights, unless it is really gloomy.
I don't mind those who use lights when I don't, but I do get upset
at those who insist on lights out in fog, heavy rain and dark mornings
and evenings, and then flash angrily when they are not seen.
Steve
|
923.39 | Never too early! | FOOT::SAXBY | Isn't it 5.30 yet? | Fri Jan 19 1990 12:51 | 12 |
|
Re .38 and previous
The answer is that you can't put your lights on too early (we're
talking about headlights here, sidelights are strictly for parking
in my book). If it's light and you have them on then you are unlikely
to cause anybody else any inconvnience (unless they're badly adjusted
, but that's another matter) and if it's gloomy, raining, dark,
foggy, etc they can only improve your chances of being seen and
reduce the chance of you being involved in an accident.
Mark
|
923.40 | Escargot | VANILA::LINCOLN | Reality is not what it seems | Fri Jan 19 1990 13:22 | 7 |
| I once tried snails in a swiss restaurant. They tasted, as
most who've tried them will agree, like garlic coated car
tyres.
Often wondered where they picked up the flavour.
-John
|
923.41 | | FORTY2::BETTS | Safety Fast | Fri Jan 19 1990 13:25 | 9 |
|
If, as you're driving along, you wonder whether you ought put
your lights on, then do. Aim to be the first to put them on
in conditions of poor visibility, and the last (within reason)
to turn them off - after all, you're using the lights to help
other people see you; if they have their lights on it may be an
indication that they couldn't see unlit cars that easily...
Bi||
|
923.42 | Dipped lights all the time! | CLADA::LOUGHLIN | | Fri Jan 19 1990 13:42 | 7 |
|
The Irish equivalent of British Telecom, Telecom Eireann has
introduced a policy wherby their vehicles used dipped headlights
at all times (during the winter months anyway). Apparently, this
is based on reduced accident rate figures from mainland Europe.
Marty.
|
923.43 | Be seen and be safe(r) | IJSAPL::CAMERON | Yesterday was worse than tomorrow | Fri Jan 19 1990 13:51 | 12 |
|
Well it looks like most people are in agreement here. As an ex-biker,
dipped headlights or "driving lights" on at all times, dipped headlights
on all vehicles are good idea in many conditions. After motoring
experiences over the past 10 years anything that helps you "be seen"
by other road users has to be a good idea.
The trend over here is to have dipped headlights on at ALL times, bar
a bright sunny day, except Police Porsches who tend have them on
whatever the weather !
Gordon
|
923.44 | I do it, too | SUTRA::LEHKY | I'm phlegmatic, and that's cool. | Fri Jan 19 1990 14:19 | 17 |
| They are mandatory in Sweden. Surveys there and in time limited tests
in other countries have shown that, indeed, they do help. Not so much
the other drivers, but definitely the pedestrians, bikers and
motorbikers.
Already about 15 years ago, I started to use the headlights during the
day if the weather was "grey" or if for instance I had the sun going
down right in my back.
Kind people always tried to warn me that my batteries would run empty
:-). It's getting worse in France. They think that I try to warn them
from a radar trap '^). Goal reached: I definitely was seen from far
away.
Approvingly yours,
Chris
|
923.45 | | SHAPES::BUCKLEYC | | Fri Jan 19 1990 14:31 | 18 |
|
I have to disagree with lights on at all times, I find that in many
circumstances, I cannot judge the speed of a car so well with lights on
rather than off, because of the dazzle.
At night I also find many dipped beams to be much too bright for me, and
I have occasionally flashed people even though they have correctly
adjusted lamps. They destroy your ability to see
by your own headlamps so badly that it is positively dangerous.
I also read in a M****C**** magazine of a study that came to the
conclusion that day-lights for bikes were not safer. Sorry can't
remember its name.
Chris
|
923.46 | Light laws in Sweden | BRIANH::NAYLOR | Purring on all 12 cylinders | Fri Jan 19 1990 14:38 | 23 |
| >>They are mandatory in Sweden.
Not sure that's totally true, although they do have "day running lights" on most
cars, as I saw many cars without lights during my hols there last July. Norway
has big signs at the border saying dipped headlights are compulsory at all times
Perhaps a Swedish reader can give the definitive answer?
One disadvantage I noticed in Sweden though was that on hot days when the roads
started shimmering, you could not tell how far away the oncoming traffic was nor
guesstimate it's speed too well as the lights shone brightly through the shimmer
and gave a totally unrealistic illusion of their speed/distance. If in doubt,
hold back, was the order of the day!
Interesting how different authorities define "night" though, and thus the need
for lights (other than road users) - maritime is sunset to sunrise - when the
lighthouses are switched on - and the CAA define it as half an hour AFTER sunset
to half an hour BEFORE sunrise, or something about the sun being 12.5 degrees
below the azzimuth ... or somesuch.
Brian
PS Anyone remember that great Jasper Carrot session about "You can't turn the
lights off on a Volvo"? Hilarious!
|
923.47 | | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | | Fri Jan 19 1990 15:32 | 18 |
| Re: .45
> I have to disagree with lights on at all times,
> ... because of the dazzle.
But surely, if lights dazzle you, it must by definition be dim enough
for lights to be required?
> At night I also find many dipped beams to be much too bright for me, and
> I have occasionally flashed people even though they have correctly
> adjusted lamps. They destroy your ability to see
> by your own headlamps so badly that it is positively dangerous.
I agree that lights tend to be a lot brighter these days. But that's an
issue to take up with the manufacturer, not the poor driver. Are you
suggesting he shouldn't use them? :-)
Jeff.
|
923.48 | Important reason | SHAPES::GALVINS | Steven GALVIN @UCG, DTN:781-4393 :-) | Fri Jan 19 1990 16:58 | 7 |
| I know this may seem a negative reason for having your lights on but...
...if you are involved in an accident and if you have to give a
statement then it is, of course, quite beneficial to say that you had
been using your lights ( if relevant ).
Steven
|
923.49 | Headlights needed when... | JANUS::BARKER | Jeremy Barker - Reading, England | Sat Jan 20 1990 02:58 | 8 |
| Re: a few back
It is actually required by law that you use dipped headlights in conditions
of poor visibility.
Headlights must also be used between sunset and sunrise.
jb
|
923.50 | OUCH... | MCGRUE::FRENCHS | Co .Nan, a company of child minders. | Mon Jan 22 1990 13:59 | 38 |
|
Re...
At night I also find many dipped beams to be much too bright for me, and
I have occasionally flashed people even though they have correctly
adjusted lamps. They destroy your ability to see
by your own headlamps so badly that it is positively dangerous.
Are so your the 'gentleman' that thinks to himself...
Gosh your lights are a bit bright but are dipped. I'll flah my lights
at you anyway just to let you know they slightly dazzled me.
Thus ensureing that the poor devil you flashed can't see S*D ALL. This then has
the effect of making him slow down rapidly, or even driving straight into you
if it's on a bend.
I drive a Landrover and the lights are a bit high because I am on a raised
chassis. I was driving into a faily sharp left hand bend. The car in the other
direction decided that my lights were too bright and flashed me. Extra to the
normal full beam he had four extra spotlights. I could not see anything.
If I had not virtually stopped I would have either gone into the ditch and
bushes on my side of the road, or straight into the oncomeing lane. It then
took three or four minutes for my night vision to return.
If I forget to dip my headlights (and two extra spots that point to the ground)
then flah me and I will dip them. But beware flah me with more candle power
Blackpool and I may just stick my RSJ of a bumper into the side of you nice
shiny car.
Not being directed to anyone in particular, but just remeber what you are
flashing, and for how long. a very quick flash will get the message across,
where as a prolonged flash will 'blind' ALL oncomeing traffic.
Simon.
|
923.51 | | SHAPES::BUCKLEYC | | Mon Jan 22 1990 16:27 | 7 |
|
Actually I flashed them because I thought they were on main beam.
I only assumed afterwards that they were on dip as they ignored my
warning.
Chris
|
923.52 | Yep, me as well. | MCGRUE::FRENCHS | Co .Nan, a company of child minders. | Mon Jan 22 1990 16:53 | 3 |
| Now that is a common mistake that we all make.
Simon
|
923.53 | | CURRNT::JENKINS_R | Undone, Underdone or Overdone? | Mon Jan 22 1990 16:55 | 15 |
| re .47
� Re: .45
�
� > I have to disagree with lights on at all times,
� > ... because of the dazzle.
�
� But surely, if lights dazzle you, it must by definition be dim enough
� for lights to be required?
No! The bright point source of light does the dazzling - just like
looking at the sun in broad daylight!
|
923.54 | Many lights are badly adjusted | JANUS::BARKER | Jeremy Barker - Reading, England | Mon Jan 22 1990 17:30 | 4 |
| It is of course illegal to use any light in any way that dazzles another
driver.
jb
|
923.55 | Don't look me in the eyes..... | VOGON::KAPPLER | John Kappler | Mon Jan 22 1990 17:49 | 20 |
| One of the driving tips I learnt during Rallying was not to look at the
opposing cars lights. Even if they're dipped, they will still cause you
to lose your night vision (especially if they flash you!).
The trick is to use the illumination of their lights to look at the
road on your side, until your lights take over and you then pass the
other vehicle.
The temptation is that dipped lights that are poorly adjusted make you
stare at them until you can decide whether they are badly adjusted or
main beam so you can flash. By that time your eyes are really drawn to
the beams and you flash angrily. The whole thing is a terrible
escalation spiral.
JfK
p.s. Another trick is to close one eye (assuming good vision in both),
and to "swap" eyes at the moment of transition from light to dark or
vice versa. This also works for entering tunnels. Something to do with
speed of adjustment from dormant being better than that from extremes?
|
923.56 | | UFHIS::GVIPOND | this is my personnal name | Mon Jan 22 1990 18:24 | 18 |
|
Re a few back
It is the law taht all vehicles must have driving lights on when
driving in Sweden. If they dont and they are swedish they will get
done, if a foriegner you may get away with a reminder.
Having spent 2� years living in Stockholm I can vouch for the
effectiveness of lights even in summer, you can see cars approaching
from MILES away. It did get a little tiresome though when i went home
for the weekend etc and EVERYBODY flashes at you to warn you your
lights are still on.
Garry
|
923.57 | Get 'em off! | FOOT::PREECE | Shipwrecked and comatose | Tue Jan 23 1990 09:01 | 12 |
|
Re. Flashing vs Dazzling
Why not "flash" your lights OFF at night ? A quick flick of the
switch will blink the lights down and back up again, too quickly to lose
sight of anything, but certainly enough to get attention.
I started doing this after I figured out that the one thing I
HATE is having somebody "thank" me, for letting him go first, by
blinding me !
Ian
|
923.58 | light fantastic!. | SHAPES::STREATFIELDC | WIZARD STUFF | Tue Jan 23 1990 09:22 | 10 |
| re.55
>>Shut one eye when a cars lights come into view/dazzle you.
Sweet Memories!, They tought us this in the Army cadet corps ages ago,
for night training. Apparently it can take upto 5 minutes to regain full
night vision, if dazzled by a light, The difference is quite alot during
those 5 mins.
Carl.
|
923.59 | | BREW11::BELL | Martin Bell, EIS Birmingham, UK | Tue Jan 23 1990 09:23 | 10 |
| Re: .57
I totally agree, i often flash from main to dim-dip and back to
be polite at night.
It is often more easily seen as well, sometimes a dip in the road
can make oncoming cars "look" like they have flashed, when they
haven't.
mb
|
923.60 | | MARVIN::COCKBURN | Promoting International Unity | Tue Jan 23 1990 11:34 | 8 |
| I also dip from main to side lights at night, however I started doing it
to let people know:
1) You've got your side lights on, and you should really have your headlights on
2) Your lights are faulty (one on side lights, the other on dipped etc)
It's more polite than dazzling them, and you don't get flashed back either!
|
923.61 | X-( | HEAD::BOPS_RICH | What Ho !, Holsten brewery yet? | Wed Jan 24 1990 17:16 | 11 |
| I am pretty sure that I suffer from slight "night blindness". The
symptom is that other cars lights seem to always dazzel you, causing
some loss of vision. I am also sure that his has got worse since
working on computers more.
Reading some of the previous replies I dont think I am alone. On
the radio they suggested this condition may effect upto 40% of drivers.
Rich
(Now-where-is-the-side-of-the-road-now-that-theyve-dug-up-the-cats-
-eyes)
|
923.62 | | BOOKIE::DAVEY | | Wed Jan 24 1990 21:20 | 22 |
| > (Now-where-is-the-side-of-the-road-now-that-theyve-dug-up-the-cats-
> -eyes)
Think yourself lucky that there once were cats-eyes... here in
Massachusetts, home of the infamous Boston driver, roads are usually
poorly lit and in the 20,000 miles I've driven since I've been
here I've probably seen fewer than a few dozen cats-eyes.
This can be dangerous on wet, dark days when you're being dazzled
by a Massachusetts driver who's making a three-point turn on a
major highway and you're trying in a split second to work out what
the h*** he's doing and which way the road goes!!
Regarding night vision and computer terminals, the optician I saw
a month or two back told me that I was suffering a "typical" VDT
user's ailment - focussing on differently-distanced objects was
taking my eyes longer because of the time I spent at my screen.
I guess the VDT-induced night-blindness might be related to this
in some way?
John
John
|
923.63 | INSTALL -> Upgrade | RUTILE::BISHOP | | Thu Jan 25 1990 15:22 | 9 |
| re :.47
Don't forget that many people 'upgrade' their bulbs for better
night vision ignoring the effect on other people.
I have seen an advert to upgrade from 220W spotlight bulbs to ...
440W bulbs!!!!!
Normal lights can also be 'upgraded'.
|
923.64 | Light Entertainment | IOSG::MARSHALL | Scott "Wanted: Garage to rent" | Mon Feb 12 1990 14:14 | 22 |
| On the subject of too many lights, from 1991 cars in Britain may have at most
TWO front fog lights. This should stop people testing the strength of their
front bumper by loading it with lights.
I agree that headlights are becoming too bright these days. Our eyes adjust
very well to driving in the dark with "sensible lights", and this is messed up
by the excessive brightness of approaching lights. More street lights and cats
eyes are a better solution than brighter headlamps. (I didn't realise how
useful cats eyes were until I drove down a bendy, pitch black road that had
none!)
Even if headlamps are "correctly" adjusted (quotes 'cos very few are
non-dazzling these days), the slightest bump in the road causes them to flash
glaringly at oncoming traffic, and when meeting a car coming over the brow of a
hill...
Unfortunatley, the only way to get round the problem is to fit brighter lights,
so that having been dazzled you are not so dependent on your night vision.
And so the situation gets worse...!
Scott. %-(
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