Owner's Manual

Here are some tips on night driving,
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Drive defensively.
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Don’t drink and drive.
Since you can’t see as well, you may need to slow
down and keep more space between you and
other vehicles.
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Slow down, especially
on
higher speed roads. Your
headlamps can light up only
so much road ahead.
In remote areas, watch for animals.
If you’re tired, pull off the road in a safe place
and rest.
Night
Vision
No
one can see as well at night as in the daytime. But as
we
get older these differences increase.
A
50-year-old
driver may require at least twice as much light to see the
same thing at night as a 20-year-old.
What you do in the daytime can also affect your night
vision. For example, if you spend the day
in
bright
sunshine you
are
wise to wear sunglasses. Your eyes will
have less trouble adjusting to night. But if you’re
driving, don’t wear sunglasses at night. They may cut
down
on
glare from headlamps, but they also make a lot
of things invisible.
You can be temporarily blinded by approaching
headlamps. It can take a second’or two,
or
even several
seconds, for your eyes to readjust to the
dark.
When
you
are
faced with severe glare (as from
a
driver who
doesn’t lower the high beams, or a vehicle with
misaimed headlamps), slow down
a
little. Avoid staring
directly into the approaching headlamps.
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