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arjietoday at 3:53 PM2 repliesview on HN

This feature must be old. My Subaru Forester 2018 has it. What non-US cars have are those new zone dimmable lamps.

Regardless I keep my auto dim off and just down. I don’t usually need the headlamps in high beam mode.

What would be useful is a taller median between both sides on a highway since often the blinding is because of a difference in the direction facing due to the grade of the highway. Facing people who are looking up a hill is awful.

It is true, that many drivers drive with the high beam on. My cabin is frequently illuminated by their lamps. My lamps never illuminate the cabin of a car I follow by comparison. This strange asymmetry does annoy me and I am certain I’m in the right but it’s usually resolvable by allowing them to pass.


Replies

manwe150today at 4:16 PM

If you are using low-beams and driving more than about 45 mph, you can hit something (or someone) before you had time to see it (or them). Granted, that doesn't matter if you're following someone else, since they'll hit it first. Which is why you need high-beams on when there isn't someone else around to light up the distant part of the road for you--and which depends on how often you drive remote roads.

show 1 reply
soperjtoday at 4:17 PM

> resolvable by allowing them to pass

How do they ever find out that they're wrong if you don't turn your highbeams on after they pass?