Why are modern car headlights so bright? How to prevent dazzle

Why are modern cars’ headlights so bright? We explain what’s causing more drivers to be dazzled at night and how to prevent it

Are car headlights getting brighter? Ask around, and you’ll find it’s a common grumble among anyone that drives, especially those that frequently take to the road first thing in the morning or at night.

They’ll tell you that on an unlit road, especially one with crests or undulations, oncoming traffic can leave them feeling as if they can’t see.

During the winter months, the problem is exacerbated. Fewer daylight hours mean cars spend more time with their lights on. And the latest technology on modern cars has introduced superior lighting power to even the average family car.

While that’s great for any driver of a car with powerful lights, it’s not so safe for drivers of oncoming vehicles. They can find themselves blinded by the brilliant light from the latest systems.

Is there anything dazzled drivers can do? And will headlights continue to get brighter?

What’s the problem?

It’s a fact that car headlights are getting brighter. The motor industry is continually boasting about how it has improved lighting performance, to keep drivers safe. Meanwhile, eye specialists say the downside is that this actually impairs the vision of increasing numbers of drivers in oncoming traffic.

At the same time, as drivers age the eye’s lens and cornea effectively become misty, and as bright light in shone through them, drivers suffer something called ‘disability glare’. Studies have shown it can take up to 10 seconds to recover from the phenomenon.

According to police data, accident investigators report ‘dazzling headlamps’ as an influence in 10 fatal crashes, nearly 70 serious accidents and more than 250 other accidents.

Bicycle lights can be just as dazzling

Given the improved performance of bicycle lights, they can be just as dazzling for oncoming traffic. Especially if the rider hasn’t correctly positioned the light to ensure the light beam isn’t in the direct eyeline of oncoming drivers.

Is there a quick fix for drivers?

Happily, there is. Professor John Marshall, of University College London, says anyone can buy and use special clear glasses, even if they don’t need prescription lenses. These have a coating on the lens to absorb ultra violet light and prevent glare when driving at night. They are relatively inexpensive, from £10, and any optician will be able to advise what best suits a driver’s needs.

Other preventative measures

If your car’s windscreen is dirty, either on the inside or outside, the dirt will cause light to refract, making it harder to see where you’re going. It’s also important to ensure your car’s headlights are correctly adjusted and the bulbs aren’t aged with use. And don’t forget to take an eye test regularly – at least every two years, according to optometrists.

What are car makers doing?

Ford is going to great lengths to make its latest family cars safer for owners and other drivers alike. Its new Glare-Free Highbeam adjusts the headlight beam angle and intensity to one of seven settings according to speed, ambient light, steering angle, distance to the vehicle in front and windscreen wiper activation. Find out more about it, in our earlier blog post. Other mainstream car makers are developing similar systems. However, as anyone who has used them will know, they aren’t foolproof.

From halogen lights to Xenon systems

Why are modern cars’ headlights so bright? We explain what’s causing more drivers to be dazzled at night and how to prevent it

Traditional halogen bulbs made way for brighter Xenon, or high intensity discharge (HID) lights in the early ‘90s. BMW first fitted the system to its 7 Series flagship. It was widely praised by users for the brightness of the light and associated reduction in driver fatigue. The bulbs also lasted longer, for around 2000 hours.

LEDs

Why are modern cars’ headlights so bright? We explain what’s causing more drivers to be dazzled at night and how to prevent it

First fitted to the Audi A8 luxury saloon in 2004, engineers and designers alike prefer to use light-emitting diodes (LEDs) when making modern cars. That’s because they use less power than Xenon units, give more freedom for styling the body parts, as they’re so compact, and the light produced is bright.

There are other advantages. The light can be manipulated, such as when adjusting the pattern of the full beam to allow for oncoming traffic or pedestrians. And they are claimed to last for comfortably more than 5000 hours.

The latest headlight tech: matrix laser lights

If you thought LEDs were bright, think again. Audi was the first car company to fit laser lights to a car, in 2014. The technology sounds like it belongs in a Star Wars movie. But high-intensity laser diodes are fitted to the Audi R8 sports car and light the road ahead when the driver selects the main (full) beam pattern.

The laser system is claimed to offer twice the range of even the brightest LED. Its laser diodes create a bright blue light that has to be filtered by phosphor converters to make it white and harmless to the human eye.

In the future, Audi engineers hope to combine laser lights with driver aids to help pick out pedestrians, project graphics – to help indicate the width of the car – or pick out road signs.

137 comments on “Why are modern car headlights so bright? How to prevent dazzle

  1. John Harper 23/01/2018 6:20 PM

    If accidents have been caused by these ridiculous headlights I would have thought there would be a case for taking the vehicle manufacturer to court! Make your voice known Green Flag and get the vehicle manufacturers to re-call these dangerous models to change the headlights.

    • Jamin Jef 13/11/2018 7:03 AM

      I agree! Recall the blinding lights and replace them with halogen!

      • James Robinson 04/02/2019 5:13 AM

        Totally agree. LED is the same exact diodes used for illegal laser pointers. Yet some schmucks decided to hook them up to car/truck batteries and try to blind people with them. This wasn’t by accident, no one is that dumb.

        They are doing this on purpose. There are a lot of evil people out there now trying to kill or just harm as many people as possible. Those awful leds are not even close. They are compacted rays like a laser and also they are a horrible stark color, just “white”…. what is that. Then they are also about 80TIMES MORE BRIGHT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Than the headlights that did Humans just fine for many decades with no complaints. hahah. We’ve got some thugs out there now in our Automobile Manufacturing Business

        We have crazy doctors too and we have crazy cheap junk from China imported. Now we have crazy automobile manufacturers that don’t have a clue.

        • Lynn Wallace 06/03/2020 6:41 PM

          Totally agree. These ridiculously bright lights convey a sinister purpose. I’ve heard they can damage the eye’s retina. I take it that the higher powers want to blind us if they can’t kill us.

        • Faez Khan 07/12/2020 12:52 PM

          Spot on ✌️

      • alain smithtee 23/09/2020 8:01 PM

        In my opinion, its a matter of choosing the correct LED emitter. I recently replaced my incandescent headlights with LEDs, and chose LED emitters that have the same color temperature [4000 degrees Kelvin] as most current halogen headlights. I also had the headlights professionally aimed by an auto repair shop. I can now see better, and I don’t blind other drivers.

        As far as bicycle headlights are concerned, my local bike shop seems to think that “brighter is always better”, but I disagree. I use German STVZO bicycle headlights that have reflectors designed to let the bicycle rider see without blinding oncoming drivers.

      • Carol Cobb 19/03/2021 9:13 PM

        Yes! I have an eye condition in which the retina pulls and releases floaters, especially in bright sunlight, or in the path of these cars with the insanely bright lights that are blinding us! I never had the problem of driving at night when the lights were dimmer, until recently. And I’ve been driving for 55 years! The halogens were comfortable, yet adequate. What is wrong with these manufacturers? Why don’t they get it?

    • Bill 27/09/2019 6:15 AM

      Amen! I remember when the Blue Beamed lights were first on the market. A rep from J.D. Powers & Assoc. was saying that the National Auto Safety Board had received more than 10,000 letters complaining they were way too bright. Of course nothing happened, probably due to manufacturing lobbies that fight tooth and nail for product legislation leniency. In CA, State laws tell people high beam use is illegal on streets with street lights and otherwise must be turned off within 300 feet of oncoming traffic… its even on the written DMV test, but there is otherwise ZERO reinforcement from the State and local governments, even informationally. Its on official websites, but who is going to care to look it up ??? They use to have Public Service Safety reminders on radio and tv decades ago to bring these things to people’s attention. And that was when the population was 10 times lower than it is now. We’ve been screwed by government neglect and greedy lobbyists when it comes to what is an aggravating safety issue for millions of drivers.

    • Joseph Miles Misener 05/01/2020 8:57 AM

      Most of the biggest offenders are law enforcement vehicles…

    • Shirley Holman 06/03/2020 6:36 PM

      Yes these stats should been an early warning that was taken seriously. There is ZERO need or justification for ridiculously bright lights. Auto companies have to take the blame on this one.

  2. Gladys Mead 06/02/2018 4:25 PM

    Thanks for the information

  3. tim 06/02/2018 5:53 PM

    I find a lot of cars that are dazzling are foreign registered , this is because their headlights are set wrongly for driving on the left, they are not using beam deflectors as we have to when we drive abroad, if we drive without them abroad we face a fine , but this does not seem to be enforced here in the uk

    • Victor Biush 16/02/2018 4:47 PM

      I agree entirely. Isn’t this something the EU shjpould be sorting pout?

      • Barrie Lindsey 19/02/2018 11:16 PM

        Why put this on the EU? We do not need nurse maids, we just need action from our Minister of Transport and Parliament. They could make it law that all headlights should sense oncoming lights and dip automatically.

        • Bill 21/08/2020 4:53 AM

          The problems, though, do not stop and start with approaching traffic issues. There are idiots who sit parked curbside in residential areas talking on their cell phone with their high beam lights on, and anyone coming towards them has to endure their bright lights for the entire length of the street sometimes before passing them. The parked vehicle just sits there blinding everyone. Secondly, these lights are so bright, they can be blinding when you’re trying to make a left turn at an intersection and can even be distracting from 6 to 8 blocks away, if there are no other vehicles in front of them… They look like a dazzling star that fell to street level and become the most prominent thing in your field of vision. It’s pure insanity. Nothing but selling points for auto dealers at the expsnse of public safety. No one was ever complaining that headlights (or tail lights) were too dim.

    • Jordan 09/11/2018 12:29 AM

      not really cause most domestics are just as bright especially any ford or chevy truck and honestly its ridiculous im getting to a point now where im just almost considering just leaving my high beams on all day since i have a 2002 mazda and see how other peole like being blinded in they’re rearview mirrors and oncoming traffic. And honestly we dont need bright lights for safety we need better drivers aka strict driving schools, maybe learn to drive manual before you get on the road like other countries with way lower accident ratings.

      • James Robinson 04/02/2019 5:18 AM

        It’s mostly people 16-35 that are driving around and they are so dumb in those age groups and have no “taste” what so ever, so they don’t even care. They probably think it’s cool to damage peoples eyes and try to blind them with these hideously bright white Diodes.

        • Build A Burger 20/12/2019 5:49 AM

          Lots of people in this age group aren’t like that at all. And when bad people turn a certain age, they aren’t suddenly better people.

    • Bill 27/09/2019 6:42 AM

      The initial dramatic change in American automobile illumination, came when Chevy switched to European-influenced, 3 color ( red/amber/clear ) tail lights on the Camaro. The problem was, European lights were designed for overcast conditions that exist i.e. the German Autobahn, etc. and both front and rear lights are brighter to stand out better in those conditions. Well, after that, typical American auto mobile design tradition started morphing ala European and long time domestic traditions started fading and changing forever. For the sake of seeming more sophisticated, style started eclipsing safety in many ways and part of that was the attraction of the brightest lights on the market… for the driver… but not with any thought about anyone around them. I know for myself, I repeatedly have to angle my side mirrors down towards the road or get blinded from behind and find myself with one hand on the steering wheel and the other blocking the left side of my view to keep from getting blinded by oncoming high beams. I am getting some glare-resistant glasses soon, but it seems like the entire equation is having to be remedied by the wrong party.

      • C 12/12/2019 12:38 PM

        Bill, I angle my side mirrors as well – back into the offending vehicle, usually causes them to back off enough that their lights aren’t a nuisance anymore.

        • Ruth Weald 02/03/2020 5:21 PM

          What a good idea

  4. Derek Reed 06/02/2018 7:23 PM

    Surely it is illegal to dazzle other drivers, so vehicle manufacturers must take the blame.

    • DAVID CORY 14/02/2018 3:49 PM

      Drive often at night time, The car or van behind,even on dipped beam floods my car interior and reflects in my wing mirrors ,I have been made to slow down and wave the vehicle past,surely again these lights are breaking the law. My MOT tester would not pass them.

      • chris kilkenny 20/02/2018 8:30 AM

        chris
        a lot of mot stations are passing cars on there lights without checking beam alignment also passing cars without number plate lights which is a legal requirement and you are right about bright lamps I thought uk law states maximum bulb brightness of no more than 100w

        • James Robinson 04/02/2019 5:22 AM

          It’s not really the alignment. It’s just the diodes them self. Also the bright compact white. It’s literally brighter than the sun. The actually light they put out for the driver to see on the road is dim and a black and white color. The tech is flawed in so many ways.

      • Captain Mainwaring 05/12/2018 3:36 PM

        Don’t forget that vehicles don’t need an MOT until 3 years old, so they’ll be driving around dazzling everyone until then.

  5. Alan eastman 07/02/2018 9:36 AM

    Dear GreenFlag,
    Thank you for all your interesting information and advice. A problem I find at night is being able to decide if an oncoming car has an indicator flashing. Most cars these days have their front indicators included in the headlamp cluster. This I feel is bad as the indicator light is drowned out by the brightness of modern headlamps. Therefore I think indicators should be separate from headlamp clusters and on the extreme sides of the vehicle and not inboard to some degree, as so many are. It’s also worth remembering that at least one in ten males are to some degree colour blind, as am I. Red/green/brown is the most common

    • PAUL JARVIS 13/02/2018 10:00 AM

      Well done Alan, I couldn’t agree more. Many front indicator lamps are invisible when the headlamps or Daylight Running lamps are on – rubbish design. This is both dangerous and causes unnecessary congestion/fuel waste/emissions waiting for vehicles to pass when in fact it’s turning off etc. What are the DVSA there for? It’s about time they started earning their money.

      • Chris W 14/02/2018 1:32 PM

        I totally agree with everything that is said. I would also like to mention that brake lights are also getting brighter and drivers still sit at traffic lights with their foot on the brakes instead of applying the handbrake. This can cause an image in the eye when the brake is finally released

        • Brian Sweeting 17/02/2018 4:54 PM

          In contravention of the Highway Code. Also badly taught by driving schools.

      • marco 21/08/2019 6:07 PM

        Some car companies have found a fix for this. They will turn off the headlight on the side where the turn signal is activated to make it stand out more. Porsche, Audi, and many FCA cars do this.

    • DAVID CORY 14/02/2018 3:43 PM

      Totally agree stupid design ,surely these cars would fail the MOT. Not only causes confusion at night time, day time driving lights are brighter than the indicators.Been caught out a number of times on mini-round abouts.

  6. Eileen Long 07/02/2018 3:41 PM

    I wear glasses with anti glare lenses but still have problems with car headlights and even more so when it is raining. What is the answer to that problem?

    • Jeff 02/03/2018 1:09 PM

      I try to drive behind another car so he get’s most of the problem with the oncoming traffic!

    • Suzy 17/01/2020 1:13 AM

      There’s the rub. Rain. It’s bad enough being blinded at night, but add rain to the mix and you could be toast! Happened to me twice already. Hilly curving road. Nothing you can do, and no way to prove any fault if you die! Driving behind someone is not an option when the highway is out in the country with little traffic. I wish they would ban them altogether. Deadly headlights I call ’em.

      • Eric Hayman 17/01/2020 1:47 PM

        It is time to change the regulations to specifying the lumens maximum, not the wattage. Think of low wattage lights in the home that are as bright as the old higher wattage tungsten filament bulbs.

  7. D Temple 08/02/2018 9:39 AM

    Recall of all cars fitted with these driver dangerous lights ! If these drivers of cars with these lights cannot see at night , they should not be driving at night !

  8. Ian Herridge 08/02/2018 11:13 AM

    I think the introduction of dipped headlights in towns and cities was a mistake. So much light, especially on wet days, washes out any detail around the vehicles. They should have scrapped the 5 watt side light and increased it to 21 watt. Also, people replacing bulbs and not fitting them properly.

  9. Sue 08/02/2018 1:51 PM

    Interesting information. I am in my 60’s and I don’t like driving in the dark now because of oncoming dazzling headlights. I wear glasses with anti glare for driving which helps a bit but I still find I am being dazzled by these bright headlights and when it is wet it is much worse. I feel it distorts things when wet and I cannot judge distances as I should. Unfortunately it is impossible not to commute when dark.

  10. Freda Gibbs 08/02/2018 8:19 PM

    I agree with Alan Eastman’s comment, even in daylight on a wet dull day if drivers have their lights on it’s hard to make out in some models if an indicator is being used.

  11. Isobel 09/02/2018 9:27 AM

    I have long thought that the new bright white lights are dangerous – both on cars and bicycles. Bright red cycle lights are equally dazzling. The flashing/pulsating setting on cycle lights just compounds the issue further. It’s impossible to see beyond these lights, which makes night driving increasingly hazardous. The sooner these types of lights are outlawed and replaced the better.

  12. Carol Byrne 09/02/2018 9:45 AM

    What ever happened to the “Don’t Dazzle Dip Your Headlights” campaign?? This should be brought back. Just by ensuring your headlights are set to “dip” can stop the glare from going straight into the eyes of drivers on the opposite side of the road.

    I have never seen a cyclist who’s lights have been adjusted so they don’t dazzle cars/bikes/pedestrians coming in the opposite direction.

    Rather than the lengthy and expensive way of taking manufacturers to court simply bring back an updated “Don’t Dazz/Dip” campaign??

  13. A. Simpson 09/02/2018 11:38 AM

    Thanks for the info that highlights a common experience, this is set to get worse even for a pedestrian that may be “picked out by approaching vehicles”. The best approach is surely the liberal use of the most efficient reflective materials to inform the driver of a blinding situation. Even if the driver is blinded by their own lights.

  14. Linda Taylor 09/02/2018 2:24 PM

    I do agree that modern headlights are a hazard and motoring organisations should put pressure on manufacturers to reconsider their use or at least put some effort into making them safer. I also agree with the comment about including indicator lights in the cluster and them being invisible by comparison. I have had a near miss because of this. Style shouldn’t override safety considerations.

  15. Betty Brunner 09/02/2018 4:34 PM

    Thank you for the info

  16. Robert Henry 09/02/2018 4:43 PM

    Good points well made, john and Alan

  17. Margaret Berry 09/02/2018 7:49 PM

    Thanks for all the information, which is so informative.

  18. Colin Brothers 09/02/2018 10:23 PM

    Having all these fancy lights is all well and good, but there are an increasing number of drivers on the road with both a headlight and sidelight not working. Highly dangerous when coming up behind me but far worse coming toward me as it appears to be a motorbike. I wonder if drivers actually check their lights reflection in the bodywork of the vehicle in front.
    I have a pair of glasses for driving at night and find them very useful especially in the wet when these high powered lights reflect and dazzle.

    • Bill 27/09/2019 7:00 AM

      Too many people are simply selfish and too lazy to think about others, these days. As others here have cited, personal indulgence shouldn’t be able to override public safety… but, it obviously has. That is greedy automobile lobbies for you. All about the money and removing the safety hurdles to get more of it. I rarely go anywhere at night any more. Its simply too annoying or I end up with a headache by the time I get back home.

  19. Anne Williams 10/02/2018 9:43 AM

    Another problem i find is when one of these monsters is behind you and the glare is lighting up your car and reflecting off your mirrors. A passing car on the other side of the road is a matter of seconds, one behind you can be there for miles.

    • Bill 27/09/2019 7:07 AM

      Another aggravation is someone parked at a curb who sits there for long periods on their cell phone and they leave their bleedin’ high beam headlights on the entire time. Good God… They’re blinding every driver coming down the road and they never go past YOU. You have to endure their lights until you pass THEM. You know they could care less. Mindless idiots!

  20. Mike Wheatlander 10/02/2018 10:19 AM

    As in many areas of road traffic regulation, enforcment has been scaled back over the years, and many vehicles have badly adjusted headlights, or have been left on continental settings. Also, cars are quite often parked, albeit for short periods when un/loading, facing oncoming traffic with headlights still switched on. It only takes a second to dazzle.

  21. Rod Giles 10/02/2018 3:15 PM

    I think a lot of motorist are fitting illegal road lights, some of which are 100 watts, way above the legal 55 watts.

    • Bill 27/09/2019 7:19 AM

      Over here in the States, some idiots with elevated pickup trucks attach long LED units meant for offroad use only, either behind the radiator grille or above the front windscreen and drive around at night rudely blinding everyone. They’re like 100 times brighter than headlights and 5 times the width. They replace their license plates with some sort of cardboard dealer logo, so you can’t report them. Its incredible the lengths some of these idiots go to just to feed their egos.

  22. Alan worthington 10/02/2018 8:05 PM

    Your interior mirror will clip at an angle to stop being dazzled from cars behind

    • Stewart Lowis 16/02/2018 6:49 PM

      This doesn’t always work, if the vehicle behind is large enough in comparison to your own you can still be dazzled in your interior mirror even with it adjusted

  23. benjamyn dee 10/02/2018 11:40 PM

    I AMA amazed st t(e number of cars, some fairly new, with only one working headlamp. Rear fog warning lights on when the road is wet but not foggy are, in my view, worse than front bright lights as these pass I. A moment whereas it is often difficult to pass someone on many of our roads.

  24. Andy B 11/02/2018 11:24 AM

    Agree totally with the comments above This has been a menace for some time now. WHY are manufacturers allowed to produce cars with VERY bright & dazzling headlights and obscurely positioned indicators? As a driver of 35+ years, I instinctively look at the outer “corners” of a vehicle for the indicators. Legislation should dictate maximum brightness levels for headlamps and that manufacturers position the indicators on the outer corners of light clusters. I have even been dazzled by daylight running lights on some cars – which are often so bright, drivers forget to put their headlights on when it goes dark!!!! Ridiculous.

    • Bill 27/09/2019 7:28 AM

      Lobbyists for the auto industry and auto parts manufacturers are the culprits. They are paid big money to relentlessly argue with governments to thwart restrictive safety measures, do they can use bright lights as a selling point and manufacturers can sell brighter bulbs to selfish nerds.

  25. Rita Stalley 11/02/2018 6:21 PM

    Thanks although l drive much at night, l will ask about glasses that help

  26. Karen 11/02/2018 9:01 PM

    My Husband and I have been complaining about these bright headlights for some time, my Husbands pet hate is when drivers leave them on when they are parked up – especially on the wrong side of the road.
    They are so dangerous and even if they were the cause of one fatal accident they should be banned

  27. Peter Smith 12/02/2018 1:23 PM

    If optometrists can put a clear anti glare coating on glasses, then why do windscreen manufactures as it is relatively cheap, not use the same technology? or the motor industry insist that the do? If this happened there would not be a problem with high brightness lighting.

  28. Chris 12/02/2018 2:50 PM

    In addition to very bright head lights, why do so many drivers also use their fog lights when there is no fog. Don’t they realise how dazzling they can be to oncoming traffic ?

    • George Moorfield 20/02/2018 10:20 PM

      Chris, drivers that leave their fog lights on, be they front or rear, when not in foggy conditions are breaking the law.

  29. Malc 12/02/2018 5:23 PM

    I find the headlights on Range Rover models dazzling, especially from behind on the motorway. They seem to be mounted very high on the front of the vehicle.

    • Bill 27/09/2019 7:36 AM

      ANY SUV type vehicle or truck SHOULD have been restricted by law to have their headlights either in, or down near the front bumper. Their body height puts normal headlights at the same level as the average sedan driver’s head… which is insane. How they let this huge flaw get approved, is beyond all logic.

      • david johnston 16/09/2020 12:34 PM

        I have been thinking the same thing for years

  30. Baz 12/02/2018 5:23 PM

    The law states that the legal wattage of a conventional bulb should be no more than 55w these new lights are the equivalent to 150w or more and produce an almost white light but are rated as lower wattage just more efficient.
    They should be illegal but the loophole exists and will be exploited just as screens are being used in the front of cars instead of normal controls.

  31. David Field 12/02/2018 6:33 PM

    I see no reason why in a city, which is well lit, why one has to use these Qh lights, do the owners of these vehicles have bad eye sight, in that case, that should not be driving, or is it by their nature to show off, and annoy other drivers with their blinding lights. In respect of the manufactures of these lights, what were they were thinking of, did they research the effect of these lights on other drivers. I drive a 1991 Volkswagen Golf Driver II, my lights do not blind any other driver, they are sympathetic to other drivers on the road, and are suitable for any weather and road conditions.

  32. Kate Stevens 12/02/2018 7:28 PM

    Yes i am increasingly finding that car head lights are more and more dazzling. I thought it was just me and that it was as a result of the aging process! While getting older may not help I have found it interesting to know that car manufacturers are making cars with so called improved head light systems for the driver. This does not help the driver that is dazzled by these lights and it has decreased my confidence for driving at night , especially in unfamiliar places. Please Green flag please pursue this matter.

  33. George Bennett 12/02/2018 7:56 PM

    When I lived in France in the early 60s the French had yellow head lights which reduced glare dramatically, why don’t we go back to this system as it did not seem to reduce the lights ability to allow us to observe the road ahead.

    • trevorjmallett 19/02/2018 3:12 PM

      The yellow lights were introduced during the Second World War to distinguish French vehicles from German ones.

  34. John Ketsi 13/02/2018 10:08 AM

    Very good article on light dazzle but equally annoying is the lack of handbrake use at traffic lights etc., The high level stop lights are a great contribution to road safety whilst on the move but are extremely uncomfortable to sit behind particularly on a wet night ! . Perhaps the problem is predominantly caused by automatic vehicles ? . It would be nice if people resumed the use of the handbrake again when stopped at , say , traffic delays ?.

  35. Has the motor industry stopped fitting mud flaps? In wet weather or if there is standing water on the road driving becomes hazardous when following large vehicles that throw up clouds of spray which can then be exacerbated by oncoming traffic with the over bright lighting. Why oh why are motor manufacturers not making safety for road users their priority rather than adding ever more gadgetry to their vehicles. They should be held responsible.

    • J. Alexander 14/02/2018 5:39 PM

      Amen to everything you have said Bobbie. Comes to something when you feel you need to wear sunglasses to drive at night! I also think it is time to force manufacturers to THINK before they add more unnecessary lighting to cars.

  36. Tony Wicks 14/02/2018 10:14 AM

    So many valid comments!!.– The greatest is for the driver to remember he is in control and responsible. To lift a finger to use the Direction Indicator seems beyond effort or worth to so many these days.

    • Bill 27/09/2019 7:43 AM

      Incredible how lazy and thoughtless so many around the entire world have become. All wrapped up in their cell phones as if nothing else but their personal bliss matters.

    • BIll 21/08/2020 6:16 AM

      It’s really a sad commentary on how wrapped up in themselves people have become… no sense that they are part of a population who’s feelings and safety matters as much as their own. Years ago, I was travelling with my parents and my Mom took over driving because my Dad was tired. She drove so slow and pretty soon there were about 10 cars behind us on a two lane only roadway. I told her to pull over and let all these other people go past as she was holding everyone up. Her reply… “Why? I don’t know any of those people!” I was dumbfounded… my own Mother… one of the jerk types we’re talking about here. I’ll never forget it.

  37. Bernard J Harris 14/02/2018 1:37 PM

    Lots of excellent points made in these comments … I totally agree that the 55W law needs to be amended to restrict brightness. But no-one has yet mentioned the fact that headlight beams can these days be adjusted by the driver – and I suspect that many drivers have their lights on “maximum height” to make the beams show more of the road ahead. I thought there was a law about this – it seems to be ineffective!

  38. Michael Jones 14/02/2018 2:47 PM

    I agree with all these comments and am suprised that led headlamps were allowed in the fiest place as they have exceeded the lighting regulations. Bicycle led light are very dazzling and there should be legislation regarding the fitting and aiming of them.

  39. Gordon Lockwood 15/02/2018 7:54 AM

    The law was I believe that it was main headlights 55/65 Watts with incandescent bulbs with a color temperature of 3000K, light is measured in lumens and modern HID and LED run at about 6500 K effectively twice the colour and much brighter in lumen power for less wattage so effectively the law as was has been bypassed,I wrote to MOT and they are doing a review this year but don’t hold your hopes up.Years ago in FOG you switched OFF your headlamps and ON the fog lamps ,no back glare as you we’re looking on top of the light beam,now we get the cars with DRIVING lights so they have 4 lights on the front increasing light pollution.need I say more,yes drive a bit slower in the dark and keep to existing lamps or alter the colour temperature of the led’s, it can be done. More eurotrash!

  40. Peter Edwards 15/02/2018 11:21 AM

    The comments about handbrake are very valid but it is the modern trend for them not to be fitted on new models and have ‘automatic’ ones instead.

  41. Geoff Page 15/02/2018 4:40 PM

    Thanks for information & advice regarding very bright head lights p

  42. Barbara Cooney 16/02/2018 4:10 PM

    An added problem for those of us who suffer from migraines is that very bright headlights (especially the horrible very blue/white lights) are known to trigger migraines in some people. The Migraine Association has been trying for years to get someone to address this issue.

    • Eric Hayman, 17/02/2018 7:56 PM

      When I was a child, of around 9 or 10 years old, I was a weekly boarder at a boarding school some 15 miles from my home. My parents would come in the car on a Friday evening and bring me home for the weekend, taking me back to school on the Sunday evening. The first stretch of road from the school had the 1950s yellow sodium street lights, while the second had bluish-white lights. The yellow lights gave me a bad headache, to the extent that I sat in the back of the car, shut my eyes and hid from them. Once we were in the bluish-white light area, I would emerge and enjoy their effect on my brain. Having been involved in photography for most of my life, I have become aware of “warm” and “cool” colours. The yellow lights would have been warm, and the bluish-white ones cool. As I became a teenager, the bad effect of yellow street lights faded. My maternal grandfather would take to his bed with migraines.

    • Bill 27/09/2019 7:49 AM

      Its unfortunately too late for a feasible remedy, I think. Too many uncaring people and not enough law enforcement to chase them down.

  43. Dave Davies 16/02/2018 5:37 PM

    As well as the bright light problem some people seem to try and counteract it by driving around with their headlights on full beam, even in built up areas near me. A quick flash of my lights seems to get a responding dip of the oncoming vehicles lights. If these people cant see to drive in the dark they should not be on the road, otherwise have some good old fashioned common road courtesy, before they cause an accident.

  44. Eric Hayman 17/02/2018 9:12 AM

    I recently passed a cyclist with a bright flashing rear light – no problem there: it immediately identified him as a pedal cyclist. But when I stopped for red traffic lights, as he caught up the beam of his equally bright white headlight hit my right door (NOT wing mirror) and blinded me. I had to shut my eyes and wait until the effect of the glare had subsided before driving on. In doubt if the cyclist was aware of this dangerous effect of his front light. I have not seen so many responses to a Green Flag topic before. So these light problems must be very common.

    A friend has a new BMW that sets the angle of the light beams as soon as he starts the car, assuming that the car is on a level stretch of road or driveway. Another bit of dangerous modern gadgetry .

    • Bee 17/02/2018 9:19 AM

      I have two cars. One is a 26 year old Land Rover Defender with very weak headlamps which won’t dazzle anyone ever. Downside is that on the country roads in the area where I live I can’t see much at night. The car has just passed its MOT without any advisories, so they must be legal. My second car is a new large BMW which has very bright adaptive lights. It also has an auto dim switch so I have never been flashed. It dips one or both lights depending what is in front, how well the street is lit – if at all.

    • David Field 17/02/2018 9:36 AM

      I was being followed by a London bus, the lights of the bus were level with my rear and side mirrors. I could not look in my mirrors because I was being blinded by the intensity of the lights, I had to fold my wing mirror in until the bus was no longer in my view, In my opinion, this is a very bad and dangerous design fault, which London Transport should be made aware of.

      • Colin Rowe 21/01/2021 8:29 AM

        Just because the technology is available manufacturers of lamps and vehicles should not feel compelled to use it. I totally agree. I was forced to stop due the blinding headlights from an oncoming car much to the annoyance of a following vehicle. Retrofitted high intensity bulbs or wrongly fitted bulbs on older cars are a major hazard which won`t be detected until the MOT.

    • Bill 27/09/2019 7:58 AM

      There are many streets around where I live that are not even from one side of the intersection to the other, which points the headlights of the opposing vehicle right in your eyes even without the high beams on. Its ungodly annoying and you can’t see to make a left turn safely, most of the time.

    • Bill 21/08/2020 5:37 AM

      That’s yet another point of contention… that the brightness of modern headlights only seems to be considered for completely flat roads and intersections, when there are hundreds if not thousands of mismatched road angles that will point headlights into opposing drivers eyes, even when the high beams are not even on. Hell, drive thru fast food places are elevated above the normal street level and cars rounding the building point their lights in the eyes of drivers all over the city. No one considers these off-street scenarios. It’s no wonder there are so many accidents at night… people are bombarded by bright headlights from all sides. The safety experts who are getting our tax dollars should be the ones bringing these points up… not the public, like you and I.

  45. Alan H 17/02/2018 11:15 AM

    this is a big problem i find not looking directly into a dazzling beam helps concerntrate your look to the road in front of you slightly to the nearside

  46. Colin 17/02/2018 11:22 AM

    Isn’t there independent safety testing of all these problems caused by the latest lightning technology? And the manufacturer’s brought to book. Perhaps a campaign by independent motoring organizations and a online petition is in order, looking at the number of responses on this issue I think there would be plenty of signatures.

  47. g 20/02/2018 10:43 AM

    I really don’t get the need for brighter and brighter headlamps – all it suggests to me is the need / want to drive faster in conditions unfit for that want / need by those who use them. That selfish need is put before the use of the roads by others more vunerable using the roads who become even more vunerable because of the use of these bright headlamps.

  48. peter chatfield 20/02/2018 5:50 PM

    All the valid comments lead one to the conclusion that a review of vehicle /cycle lighting regulations is long overdue.The safety of one road user should not compromise the safety of many others

  49. George Moorfield 20/02/2018 10:34 PM

    Headlamp alignment is part of the MOT test to ensure oncoming vehicles are not dazzled or blinded by your dipped beam. Cannot the same test be done to new cars before they are sold?

    • Eric Hayman 21/02/2018 8:27 PM

      As I have said, my neighbour friend with a 67 plate BMW tells me that after leaving his sloping driveway he has to stop on a level stretch of road, turn the ignition off and then on again for the headlights to set themselves at the correct level. Otherwise they are set far too high because his driveway slopes down towards the road and he – rightly – always reverses into the driveway. Were he to drive forwards into the driveway then reverse out onto the road, then the headlights would be set too low! He can’t win.

    • BILL 21/08/2020 5:55 AM

      A big problem is that most modern headlight units are not manually adjustable like years ago where you could turn a screw or two to get them at the right angle. Plus if a car has been in even a slight accident, that is going to throw the beam out of whack. There are cars and trucks on the streets with both lights pointing the wrong way. Safety is the LAST consideration… it’s more about cheaper manufacturing and what the car company can brag about to customers. Safety for the driver but screw everybody else. It’s the same for window tinting too. People are dark tinting their windshield and no one can see what they’re doing or if they are paying attention to anything. So many things about cars on the road are a mess due to selfish idiots.

      • Eric Hayman 21/08/2020 10:33 AM

        I have been a ‘transport enthusiast’ all my life, so I have been reading about, photographing, writing about and generally studying anything that moves – on land, sea or air. I am now 79, so I have seen many changes in all types of transport.

        On the subject of lights:

        Aircraft and airport runway lights have improved in so many ways. Until recently, I lived near London’s Heathrow Airport, and at night I watched planes coming in to land. I would count up to five in a row, landing at a around one very minute, with their landing lights piercing the dark. Airport lights are now embedded in the runways and taxiways themselves, in different colours to indicate different instructions to the pilots. AND ALL STANDARD.

        Shipping and harbours have gone from very basic lighting to the most modern. AND ALL STANDARD.

        On railways, train lights and signal lights have gone from oil lamps to basic electric lighting to LEDs. AND ALL STANDARD.

        Yet, on the roads vehicle manufacturers can design and fit any fancy headlights, tail lights, brake lights, parking lights and turn signal lights they think up. With the introduction of LEDs, parking lights are now strips of individual LEDs in straight lines, horseshoes, circles. Turn signal lights are not just round yellow lights, but may be of any shape including sequentially flashing LEDs. Tail lights are similarly of any shape the manufacturers may design. They deliberately create new designs just to be different, so that their vehicles stand out as being recognisable at night by their lights. Back in the 1940s and 1950s in the UK, only one make of vehicle was recognisable at night: the Wolesley – because a small bulb back lit up the Wolesley badge set into the radiator grille. At the time the police used a lot of Wolesleys, and they appeared in many crime story films – often with night scenes. ‘Spot the Wolesley’ was a common game. Nowadays on the road NOTHING IS STANDARD regarding vehicle lights. Their brightness is only one factor that detracts from road safety.

        Then there are all manner of LED lights used by cyclists – some flashing, some not, some as blinding as motor vehicle lights.

        Still on road safety, and the UK, the standard flashing orange Belisha beacons that indicate pedestrian crossings sometimes now have circles of flashing LEDs added. So that the first thing a driver sees is not a solid flashing orange light but a circle of flashing orange lights.

        Reaction time is never considered when designing anything new. This applies to the lighting used on all forms of transport. Road vehicle drivers, train drivers and track workers, aircraft pilots, ships’ captains – all need to react instantly to what they see. Hence the need for STANDARDISATION.

        Road vehicle design – especially car design – has turned from making vehicles to do practical jobs to designing them just to be different. While the designs have to take into account standard crash tests and survivability, etc, anything goes when it comes to lighting. Shape and brightness are all at the whim of the manufacturer – and the aftermarket. Once fitting narrow beam spotlights was just about the only aftermarket addition one saw – and they had a practical use. Nowadays anything goes – and the authorities do not care. Proving that an accident was caused by a blinding headlight would be close to impossible.

  50. Greg Gall 15/03/2018 10:45 AM

    Yes, lights on modern cars are far too bright but it’s not just cars. I have a problem with white LED street lights. I find them dazzling when passing underneath or reflecting off a wet road. When driving in unfamiliar areas, especially on bends, I see a white lit patch of road, I think it’s an incoming vehicle and have waited before overtaking parked cars only to find its one of these LED street lights. I’m all for energy saving but couldn’t the manufacturers use an amber tint as this has a less detrimental affect on night vision?

    I’ve also seen drivers use just the LED running lights at night. Don’t they realise that their rear lights are not on?

  51. lcddrm5 27/07/2018 1:56 AM

    Good to see someone make a topic about this. I drive an older car myself. My headlights aren’t bright, but just bright enough for me to see and not bright enough to go blinding oncoming traffic. It’s only good for the people who are driving said car, otherwise it’s bad for everyone else. I really can’t count the times that I’ve almost wrecked my car because I can’t see the road because someone’s headlights are wayyy too bright. Lots of these vehicles are being made for selfish reasons, all things that can help the driver…but hey, who cares about the other drivers on the road. And I got to buy special sunglasses because of them? No thanks. I shouldn’t have be paying for something because other people drive an irresponsible vehicle.

  52. Jim Darby 28/10/2018 9:01 PM

    I agree that overly bright headlights and driving lights on some newer models of vehicles, as well as available aftermarket bulbs, are terrible to drive toward and even be followed by. Driving towards anything on the roads with overly bright lighting is terrible. In fair weather it can be bad but add in rain and the “white wash” effect on a windshield and it is down right scary. One comment above also pointed out that it is really difficult to see the turn signals on these overly bright head-lighted vehicles and that person is absolutely correct. One car with overly bright headlights is negatively affecting the safety level of hundreds and even thousands of fellow drivers, bicycles, and pedestrians.
    Good lighting on vehicles and slower speeds, especially at night and in inclement weather, are the best routes to take for safety and not this path to every car having brighter headlights. I am also a strong proponent of lower night time speed limits and very strong penalties for violators of speed limits.
    Absolutely no one should care that a person or product get someplace faster on our roads when we have to sacrifice so many peoples driving safety and comfort in the process. The government and related industries need to fix this problem and fast.

    • Colin Rowe 04/12/2019 10:58 AM

      Very well said sir! I once queried why anybody needs these modern blinding high powered headlights with the owner of a BMW and was told that it allows higher driving speeds at night!! The explanation about the automatic setting of beam heights at start-up probably accounts for why so many BMWs have blinding headlights.

  53. ray 05/11/2018 12:42 PM

    The Brightless Is Fine, Use some Common Sence and point the light DOWN ON THE ROAD, Right In Front Of The Auto, Come On Automotive Engineer’s, I Have Faith In Your Quality, Now Get The Job Done!!!

    • Jim Darby 11/12/2018 7:25 AM

      I agree with you to a point but roads and vehicles have too many variables to take overly bright headlights and just point them down. One good bump in the road or a rise and a curve and those overly bright headlights are blinding people. Pickup and SUV’s are really bad on cars. If you don’t drive off the road for lack of seeing you have to get on the brakes so you can slow down enough to just get thru the situation of not being able to see at 45-55 mph. Then you get “camera flash spots” and maybe a headache to wrap things up. Good even lighting and slower speeds at night and in poor weather is much better than overly bright headlights.

  54. Eric Hayman 05/11/2018 6:10 PM

    The problem seems to be that the law (I think) still measures brightness in wattage – not lumens. It is the visible effects the bulbs have, not their electrical make-up. Is a horn not judged by its loudness rather than the amps to make the noise?

    As for cyclists having occulting/flashing lights, at least they are not confused for mopeds, scooters or motorbikes.

  55. Jamin Jef 13/11/2018 7:48 AM

    Ban the bright lights! If people can’t see with halogen lights they shouldn’t drive at night! All cars built with super-bright xenon or LED’s need to be recalled and fitted with proper lighting.

    • Jim Darby 11/12/2018 7:38 AM

      Well put Jamin Jef. An example, Dodge has some of the worst headlights on new to three year old trucks and SUVs, their cars are low so not too terrible but bad. Chevy and GMC trucks the last two years are terrible. Ford trucks are so tall as to blind people even with so-so lights. Trucks shipped tall from the factory and their “spotlight bulbs” are terrible for fellow motorists oncoming traffic or being followed by them. God help the person that has one of these trucks behind them in stop and go traffic.

    • Suzy 17/01/2020 1:20 AM

      Absolutely! Add rain and you can’t even see past your windshield! Then add hills and curves to the road…

  56. Danny Noble 17/11/2018 11:51 PM

    Hi. Here in the states we have the same problem, worst it seems to me on those horrid Acura SUV cars with 10, count them 10 headlights, all aimed directly into my eyes as they come towards me. All I can do is hold my hand up to block these offensive weapon lamps and hope I don’t run headlong into the creep. Would serve him right and my Bronco would not be fatally damaged.

    Another hazard, to them at least, is the new police lights. Police in black outfits directing traffic at night beside their cars blaring out blue LED laser light, again blinding me completely, I fear running over a cop cause I flat never see him till he yells at me. Yes, I’m 55. I also have 20-20 vision in my left eye. Right not as good due to an injury but good enough to target shoot with so….it is not me or other victims of these laser, or led or hid headlights. Halogen was good enough growing up.

    • Jim Darby 11/12/2018 7:45 AM

      Acuras are bad. Subaru seems to have upped their headlights to overly-bright, blinding status a some cars ,too. Dodge and Chevy trucks are terrible the last year or two. Ford trucks are getting bad, too. The worst in the Pacific Northwest is a lot of people want to drive a big truck or SUV for no other reason than ” just because” and their headlights blind people in regular height cars. Too add, so many people the last year or so have been driving with their headlights and driving lights on around our well lit city streets. The speed limit is 30 to 35 mph. All they are doing is blinding other motorists, cyclists, and pedestrians.

  57. Glenn Houchell 29/11/2018 7:36 PM

    It is so comforting to be in touch with a community that understands what I am suffering with. My life is much more dangerous than it was a few years ago, with the increased prevalence of dazzling lights affecting me as a pedestrian, occasional cyclist, motorcylist and car driver. I should mention that my eyes have been thoroughly tested and (with glasses) I have 20/20 vision and no sign of cateracts – which you may be accused of having.
    In recent years I have been using polaroid glasses (with all the usual filters) when I go out. These allow just 35% light through, but this is not enough. As more and more vehicles have dazzling lights I am seriously considering going down to 20% or even just 10% light, but the danger is then that I won’t be able to see stuff that is not lit – especially at night. By the way, I’ve been told mountaineers use glasses that let through just 5% light.

  58. Paul 30/11/2018 10:45 PM

    I can’t understand how these lights came to be unleashed upon us by such ineffective government road safety “authorities”- whether in Europe or the U.S. (I drive in both).

    Yes, I’m in my early 50’s and MAYBE there’s an age factor here, BUT the fact remains that these lights are literally blinding drivers, like myself, that never had issues with older headlights – which were perfectly adaquate.

    These lights have changed the way I drive. I find myself averting my eyes from where they should be. Sometimes I have to block direct glare with my hand. Worst case scenario I have to stop! Night driving NEVER bothered me up until about 2 years ago when this madness started becoming mainstream. Now it causes me great stress and I avoid it – as a matter of fact I don’t even like walking around as a pedestrian with these things..

    These lights with their ridicolous brightness levels and sharp cutoffs that take you from near darkness to retina shocking overload are simply DANGEROUS and I can only assume it’s just a matter of time before there are enough accidents and enough evidence is accumulated to bring a serious lawsuit and have manufacturers and road safety authorities sit up and think again.

    (and pointing them down as some suggest does NOT work in hilly areas or where there are speed bumps. Plus the worst of these offenders have additional “cornering” lights that just blind oncoming traffic and pedestrians even more..)

    In the meantime this is NOT an “improvement in safety” as proponents of these lights would have you think and the sooner the so called authorities get involved and put at least some limits on this insanity the better – for all of us…

    • Bill 21/08/2020 5:18 AM

      I can relate to everything you mentioned. I’ve written to the Hwy. Safety Council before and they never respond. I don’t think they care and I think lobbies are beating the crap out of them in the courts. There used to be Public Service Messages on TV and Radio that would mention problems like this. Then those disappeared and there’s ZERO voice of common sense coming from anyone these days. Public Service is almost a forgotten concept in 2020 after slowly declining over the past 20 years. The public is not getting good value for its tax dollars anymore.

  59. Laura Cooskey 17/12/2018 4:28 AM

    Reading these comments is just firing me up even more… i thought i was angry with drivers of those new vehicles with the blinding white lights; now i wish i were a big burly male, i would like to get out and punch their lights out!

  60. Catherine 30/12/2018 7:48 PM

    I totally agree. But how do I buy a new car that doesn’t have these lights which I consider dangerous?

  61. jackie williams 03/01/2019 11:06 PM

    These lights are dangerous no doubt about it.I wish you had the power to make this government and the manufacturers realise the danger they are putting innocent drivers
    through.

  62. Benson 23/01/2019 2:36 AM

    it’s just another example of technology before the human condition. Plus manufacturers looking for ways to fill their pockets ignorant to the human condition. Yeah been blinded by these headlights too often. They are dangerous I would not be surprised if they will kill somebody. But on the downside it’s just plain unnecessary. Most roads have streetlamps meaning you don’t need headlights at all. Seriously I could drive all night through my city never needing a headlight. And the people that go out of their way to purchase bright headlights are also ignorant trying to be cool I would imagine. Don’t they realize it’s ridiculous. Anyway the manufacturers or somebody should take responsibility immediately. Immediately

  63. Benson 23/01/2019 2:39 AM

    thanks for responding was such a good point of view. I left a comment saying I could turn my headlights off as all the roads where I live have streetlamps anyway(proving their unnecessary). For the manufacturers to care nothing for the people it’s shocking.somebody should do something and I mean now. I can’t believe progress it’s always harmful against humans. What the heck is going on

  64. Mike 10/02/2019 7:14 AM

    Thank you Jordan! Everything you say, I have been also saying for years now; nobody listens. My eyes are permanently damaged because of HID, LED lights – other drivers don’t give a ****. I drive with my high beams on all the time now. I am currently researching glasses to see if they make an authentic polorized 100% anti-glare from HIDs; which I don’t think is invented yet. Thanks again for speaking the truth 🙂

  65. Mike 10/02/2019 7:19 AM

    I believe the only solution to this is for these American PIGS to STOP buying these cars – Stop buying these from auto makers until they put the old headlights back — and BAN LEDs and HIDs

  66. A MacDonald 13/02/2019 9:52 PM

    I agree with all the comments made regarding the dangers of undipped bright lights and also of vehicles showing coloured lights at the front

    I was driving on a busy main trunk road when I noticed a vehicle coming behind me showing four BLUE LIGHTS at two different levels, thinking this was maybe an emergency vehicle with malfunctioning lights I pulled into a lay by to allow it to pass as the oncoming traffic was very heavy and was quite annoyed when a four wheeled pick up passed with two of the lights on the roof and two on the radiator.

  67. TJS 21/02/2019 1:42 PM

    I did a quick survey of Facebook friends regarding bright lights and I had 15 people within half an hour saying how much of a problem they were. In the UK the authorities still seem to be in denial mode, with the view that bright lights are good for safety. It’s obvious that these bright lights are bad for safety since a proportion of people are covering their eyes, turning away or closing their eyes. For those who can tolerate looking at the lights they are losing the ability to see anything in the darkness because the glare is masking those areas.

    The developers of the LED lighting started out with a technology that offered energy savings and this was turned by the manufacturers into a brightness war where the colour temperature and luminance was increased to levels several times higher than the conventional 55W bulbs. The regulatory authorities are way behind and I think it will take a few years and unecessary collisions before they accept that there’s a problem.

  68. Mike 29/03/2019 10:31 PM

    The problem is that the auto manufacturers, at least in the United States, are in bed with Congress, therefore, Nothing will be done to stop these lights from coming off the assembly line.

    The other problem is that most Americans… try to keep up with the Jones’, so to speak. Americans are lining up at dealers to buy these new automobiles, regardless of this pandemic that is not only dangerous to other drivers, but results in fatal accidents.

    BOYCOTT ALL AUTO MANUFACTURERS UNTIL THEY DISCONTINUE THESE STUPID HEADLIGHTS.

  69. Phil 15/10/2019 6:36 AM

    I agree with most of what has been said, it’s a crazy world out there. I believe this is totally down to the manufacturers, if they could make a headlight that was twice as bright, they would. When does it end, how bright is too bright and how long do we put up with it.

    Cars are becoming increasingly ridiculous, who was it decided we could no longer operate a hand brake and decided to make an over complicate electronic system, rain sensing wipers, because we can no longer tell when it is raining and there were so many wrist injuries involved in switching them on.

    Let’s not forget the rear lights, if they can’t be seen from the moon then they are totally useless. My particular thanks goes to the person who decided that we need an eye level brake light the width of Devon, Bentley, be very ashamed. Now on my way home on a rainy winters night, stopped at the traffic lights, the blazing brake lights in front of me, with a light hearted chuckle I quip, PUT YA beep beep beep HAND BRAKE ON!

  70. Bill the pilot 15/10/2019 1:30 PM

    These lights are extremely hazardous on two lane none flat roads surfaces at night and when oncoming high profile vehicles have not dimmed these lights a near total loss of vision occurs anything beyond the front of the vehicle is common, especially in smaller cars. At a minimum automatic light dimming should be required on auto’s equipped with these lights. In my opinion the industry has now gone too far and good intention will probably bring a much higher night time safety problem. Especially for pedestrians, disabled vehicles and alike on road shoulders.

  71. G. Miller 10/11/2019 8:43 AM

    I’m so glad I found this site as I also thought my eyes were getting too sensitive as I’m 49 now. I drive a VW caddy van for my company and have to drive from Woking to Windsor in the dark, regularly. I drive with sunglasses on, sun-shades down and door mirrors set outward all the time. The roads are mainly through forests and along the dark Thames so it’s now a nice combination of total darkness with totally blinding headlights! The green, red, amber traffic lights are way too bright now too and I shield my eyes as well whenever any emergency vehicles pass as the blue flashing lights would be too bright if they were at an early eighties acid-rave disco!!
    I’ve had many a near miss, and yes, poxy cycle lights and other vehicles break lights are too bright too! Doesn’t look like these lights are going to disappear anytime soon!

  72. John Willis 14/11/2019 4:41 AM

    I drive 44 hours a week for a living, for 26 years now.
    These ultra-bright headlights are dangerous. Period.

    Often, making a left turn, I have literally had to hold my hand over my eyes to be able to see enough to make my turn. That is wrong, and it is criminal.

  73. Ron Moore 18/11/2019 12:50 AM

    Extremely irritating. The insanely intense lighting needs to stop. I’ll also add that running fog lights on a perfectly clear evening needs to be dealt with too.

    • Bill 21/08/2020 5:03 AM

      Too many grown adults are fascinated by gimmickry these days. This includes having the brightest headlight bulbs one can buy, running fog lamps when not needed, buying fast blinking turn signal units, odd coloured lenses… you name it. And auto accessory manufacturers love the increased business. It’s a big party for the immature and money hungry types feeding off one another.

  74. Leland Lehrman 19/11/2019 4:51 PM

    I recommend that everyone interested in this issue be in touch with the relevant authorities and in addition write letters to the editor of the automobile magazines and other trade publications. Good to see there is agreement on the issue by so many.
    Leland

  75. Gedächtnistraining 08/01/2020 3:05 PM

    Thank you Jordan! Everything you say, I have been also saying for years now; nobody listens. My eyes are permanently damaged because of HID, LED lights – other drivers don’t give a ****. I drive with my high beams on all the time now. I am currently researching glasses to see if they make an authentic polorized 100% anti-glare from HIDs; which I don’t think is invented yet. Thanks again for speaking the truth

  76. Lenora Denise Payne 13/02/2020 10:49 PM

    I agree with taking these manufacturers to court if an accident is caused because the headlights are too bright for oncoming traffic. I travel thru the BaDLANDS IN SAN Gorgonzola pass area and the oncoming headlights are so bright, it’s ridiculous. Both passenger vehicles and big rigs have these bright lights. It’s extremely dangerous to oncoming cars because I can’t see in front of me and I’m so terrified that I’ll have an accident. Something needs to be done about these bright lights.

  77. Joe Plause 25/03/2022 9:12 PM

    Has anyone considered the amount of “dirty light”
    Rf exposure people are now being subjected too?

    Just how much radiation exposure can average human being tolerate, without health & wellness (cancer induced radiation) deterioration.

    Have you ever changed lanes, or slowed speed, then later accelerated to higher speed limit, only to have the bright light perp. mimic your very move?
    Ever see the (1 headlight out) car varying the brightness, or even turn the supposed ‘headlight out’, back on.
    Ever had someone pull out behind you, after you’ve passed them, and when they get behind you, they then turn on their headlights,
    (IN THE MIDDLE OF THE DAY)

    Ever thought;
    There might be a greater intended purpose at play?

    something to consider;
    good for thought.

  78. Paul Bunion 27/10/2022 11:49 AM

    I think manufacturers can be doing a lot more here. Cars should come with auto-dimming mirrors as standard but many do not. Many older models won’t have these mirrors. Retrofit film does exist but I haven’t tried this.

    Having owned a BMW 3’er with icon adaptive lights, I got used to some abuse on the road. Even without adaptive beam on. The good thing about them were, when adaptive beam was on and someone flashed from the opposite side, they would deactivate.

    With my current 8’er which has laser headlights, things are no better. The light is about 20% brighter than LED but at least they adapt much quicker. As soon as there is oncoming traffic, the beam dips faster than the 3’er ever could. Sadly, when someone flashes, they do not deactivate the adaptive feature if it is active.

    Personally, I find SUV’s with these lights atrocious. The beam is almost eye level and more glaring. It can give me a headache if I stare too long.

    Neither BMW was purchased with any intent of what fancy light technology it might have. I just needed a car and was more interested in engine capability than anything else.

    I do try to keep the windscreen clean though so the sensor can function properly when it detects oncoming traffic. The adaptive feature is only ever used in a single carriageway with no one around. Switched off as soon as I have caught up with any traffic.

    It’s a losing battle here in the countryside. Some prefer cars with candle stick headlights. Others with illegal HID kits. Sure you can see deer run out but some do get stunned and freeze or become confused. It won’t save you from hitting one I think.

    The car has passed MOT each time. Beams have never been adjusted. The abuse has still escalated though. From drivers brake checking me, people flipping the bird, and people pulling off the road to allow me to pass as they yell at me.

    If I could get a different car I would but for now I am still half way through my lease. Sadly, I see brighter than mine. For my next car though I will avoid them. Tinted glasses have helped me massively though and I would recommend them.

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