parking light
While we all want our cars to be unique, the first concern should
be our safety and the safety of others on the road. Your car's lights
are one of the most important safety systems you have. Included
are your headlights, tail lights, and blinkers. They help you to
see at night or in bad weather and indicate to other cars an upcoming
change in direction. Headlights and tail lights help other drivers
be aware of you and help them avoid hitting you.
Your headlights are there to help your eyes: they illuminate the
parts of the road you would not normally be able to see for yourself,
allowing you to see any upcoming danger or changes in the driving
environment. They also signal your presence to other drivers, and
perform these functions whether they are constructed in the old
manner or the new. Old headlights are one piece, an outer bulb and
an inner bulb, that are held together by screws and require you
to replace the entire apparatus when one part fails.
In newer cars, they are separate parts and are made of halogen
or tungsten-halogen bulbs. Others are xenon headlights, which are
high intensity and appear blue. Signal lights are more often made
of LEDs, and are currently being developed for headlights. It should
be easy to replace your headlight if you use caution.
Tail lights are near your car's trunk, and can either be alone
or connected to other features like blinkers. By law, they are only
allowed to be red. They help other drivers to see you at night and
you to see what's behind you. Tail lights are dimmer than brake
lights so that other drivers can tell when you are slowing down
or stopping, and are accompanied on either side by turn signals.
The parking lights, which are not longer used to warn other drivers
when a car is stopped, also add illumination, helping you to see.
Be sure to check the headlights and tail lights in your car regularly
to ensure that there is not a failure while you're on the road,
which is both illegal and dangerous for you and other drivers. Replace
bulbs that are dim or broken to up the safety of yourself and others.
Though this is required by law, you should do it anyway in order
to have the safest possible driving experience both and night and
during the day.
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