• mrgoosmoos@lemmy.ca
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    2 hours ago

    I want to know how many are related to drivers blinded by LED headlights. I’ve seen (and been a part of) dozens of near hits in the past few years because of this.

    edit: Let me just be very clear about this — if you think that the issue is only aftermarket headlights or modified vehicles, you are mistaken. you can look at pretty much any modern Toyota or Subaru or Mazda or pickup with LED headlights and see that the low beams are just as bright as the high beams, just aimed lower. and that aim lower does not matter when the low beams are shining in somebody’s face, which happens often because roads are not level and flat. and you know where this is often the case? intersections. intersections often are raised in the middle, which means the car on the other side is angled slightly upwards, which means their low beam LED headlights are blasting the person on the other side in the face, even with their “but much cutoff is correct excuse”.

    the simple inexcusable unavoidable fact is that headlights that blind people like this with this frequency are simply bad design and dangerous, and yes they also make the driver an asshole for having that vehicle and treating other people like this. like how would people feel if I just went around blasting them in the face with a flashlight that bright while walking around. they’d be livid. this is literally not any different, you’re not special just because you bought a 4,000 lb vehicle that has dangerous features.

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        There are plenty of cars with stock LED headlights and proper cutoffs, so they’re less blinding than traditional headlights

        It’s aftermarket “illegal” LEDs, LEDs that are misaligned or started at a bad height, and way too many drivers who never turn off their high beams. Yet another safety rule we only pay lip service to, resulting in unnecessary deaths

          • mrgoosmoos@lemmy.ca
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            2 hours ago

            doesn’t matter when lowbeams are just as bright as high beams and aimed at somebody’s face, though

          • AA5B@lemmy.world
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            2 hours ago

            This may be another case of needing technology to rescue people who are just that dumb.

            • Auto-high beams have been getting better over the years to the point that humans can no longer claim to be more responsive. They just work. Every time. And never forget
            • my car has active matrix headlights and it’s freaky to drive at night with the high beams on and watch a dark spot follow surrounding cars

            In ten years we’ll all forget how to toggle off high beams, as it will just work most of the time. But at the same time we’ll be blinded less as the machine never forgets

        • mrgoosmoos@lemmy.ca
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          2 hours ago

          incorrect. cutoff just means it isn’t blinding on flat level ground. which roads and streets are very much not

          • AA5B@lemmy.world
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            21 minutes ago

            I’ll take being briefly blinded as a car hits a pothole over ten terrifying seconds of zero visibility as a monstrous vehicle careens toward me and I have no idea where the street is or what’s in it

      • SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca
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        2 hours ago

        Those are aftermarket lights, or people with lifted pickups. Lights are designed to work at a set distance off the road, when people lift the truck, everything is now hi beams.

        The problem is not the industry, it’s a lack of safety laws and enforcement. North America does not safety inspect vehicles.

        • mrgoosmoos@lemmy.ca
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          2 hours ago

          lol it’s not just aftermarket or modified stuff dude, look at any new stock Subaru/Toyota/Mazda. blinding

          • The Quuuuuill@slrpnk.net
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            1 hour ago

            the regulations on intensity never presumed we’d use such small arrays to produce that intesity. in the cabin, the lights projected onto the road don’t seem that different from 20 years ago. but from the other way it’s dazzling