bdfreetuna
New member
I rather have a BMW with it's bright lights low to the ground and a proper cutoff than a Ford F250 behind me.
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What about intentionally ramming someone for cutting you off? To be honest I rarely "high beam" my fellow motorists. Tuna is right a jacked up truck that hasn't had the lights adjusted can be worse. If I am actually blinded that is when I go one the offensive and I've only intentionally rammed someone once.
It is rather ineffective in a 2001 Taurus with one hazy headlight.Yes the newer lights (especially Acura and Audi products) suck when you are in front of them.
I don't really get the whole "I blind them back and leave the high beams on" thing. Now neither one of you can see....before at least one guy could avoid the head on crash......
People always flash me in my ram 2500.. I try to flash back saying its not my fault we are just 6" too high and right in your field of vision. The newer the truck we buy the higher it sits and the lights are day and night better than 10 years ago. Dont think engineers figured this when the keep building bigger trucks.
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I believe I have only once lit their world up from the back after a particularly annoying incident.
With great power comes great responsibility.
With great power comes great responsibility.
for years for night driving I'm using yellow lens safety glasses to deal with it blinding lights of other cars
Can be picked up cheap at harbor freight for $2
What about intentionally ramming someone for cutting you off? To be honest I rarely "high beam" my fellow motorists. Tuna is right a jacked up truck that hasn't had the lights adjusted can be worse. If I am actually blinded that is when I go one the offensive and I've only intentionally rammed someone once.
And you can get prescription sunglasses made fairly cheap at places like the Walmart Vision Centers and places like that. I have a pair for bird hunting, I think they cost me $85. Great for driving on those gray days where the weather blends into the snow countryside.
I put aftermarket LED headlights in my 97 Accord (the two low beam bulbs). They work very well, greatly increasing visibility over the old lame halogens the car came with. Be warned though, aftermarket head lights will not pass inspection in Massachusetts. You will need to temporarily swap in the OEM equipment to get through insection (ask me how I found out).
Unless your lights are aiming too high it shouldn't make any difference. You can modify your headlights as long as you don't remove the amber directionals or reflectors
The LEDs are aimed exactly the same as the halogens, so bad aiming isn't the issue. The reflectors are the original OEM equipment, the only change was the bulbs, which mount in the reflector with the same retaining ring as the OEM haolgens. I had two inspection stations (one in Springfield and one in Longmeadow) fail the car due to aftermarket bulbs. They both provided the exact explanation for the inspection failure: if LED lights weren't an option from the manufacturer at the time of purchase, they were illegal in Massachusetts and the inspection station was required to fail the car. They said the same thing about HIDs: If you couldn't buy the car equipped that way from the manufacturer, it won't pass inspection.