The more I think on this, the more I wonder if it's truly unpopular "here," but it certainly is in public.
Headlights should be no more than 2 feet off the ground. Yes, your SUV will look dumb. No, you won't be able to see as far. But you also won't be blinding everyone.
And no, adjusting angles does not solve this for monster trucks in the US.
I think you should need a unique license, determined by purpose and usage, to own an SUV in the first place and all crossover models should be sent into the sun.
It's wild that I need to ask the state permission to fish but not for permission to own a uselessly oversized vehicle that doesn't even increase cabin or cargo space versus smaller vehicles and creates more dangerous road conditions by design.
Edit: furthermore, anyone responsible for the touch screen disaster in the Ford Edge should be persecuted to the fullest extent with prejudice under this new law.
furthermore, anyone responsible for the touch screen disaster in the Ford Edge should be persecuted to the fullest extent with prejudice under this new law.
The most correct answers on this are Apple (Steve Jobs) and Tesla (Elon Musk) for pushing the idea of touchscreen everything. Although an honorable mention goes to federal safety regulators who saw no problem with taking your eyes and mind off of the road for basic driver-controlled functions like changing the radio station or adjusting the temperature.
"Sure, you can have this dangerous, child-crushing, planet destroying machine that externalizes most of its costs to society, and you can use it in public and be a dick with it, but only if you are rich."
I dislike the tax idea because it makes it available to the rich without needing a purpose. Taxes are only punitive to the poor. The wealthy should have fewer rights than the underprivileged.
Edit: I think one could suggest a scaling tax based on income, but I don't think this adequately addresses the problem. The purchasing power of a single dollar doesn't scale for income, so the wealthy still benefit from this arrangement even if they have to pay more.
The Don't Tread On Me crowd does not enjoy being regulated even inside their own minds.
Regulating OTHERS, now THAT's a different story, but they will fight HARD to prevent any such common-sense measure, regardless of "saving lives" or other such benefits.
This country (I'm guessing you meant USA b/c of the context, though still applies to other similar ones too:-P) is so broken... on the other hand, more could be done about this at a local level, if you happen to be surrounded by other like-minded individuals who do not regard it as "nonsense" and want to see meaningful changes in your area.
On the other hand, unless where you live is extremely powerful such as the state of California, most such local changes would run into a huge problem with enforcement, making it extremely difficult to enact any meaningful changes on the smaller scale.
It doesn't matter where the lights are themselves. What matters is how they're angled. Almost every jackass I've seen with custom lights also has their headlights pointed straight forward; which is why you get blinded. The lights are supposed to be pointed toward the ground. Otherwise you're driving around with high beams everywhere and your high beams end up shooting into the fucking sky.
Plenty of vehicles with those blue led lights that don't blind you because they're angled correctly. I think regulating the height of the bumper (or rather, the height should be the same for an SUV or truck as it is for a normal sized car) is more needed right now.
Cars come from the factory with blinding lights. Yes modified lights are also a problem. There aren't enough regulations for either OEM nor modified headlights.
If a car's headlights are mounted higher than the mirrors of another car, no amount of aiming can stop them from being blinding.
If anything they should bring back sealed beam laws. Auto companies have proven they're unable to make headlights correctly.
This is false. In most vehicles, defined proper headlight alignment creates a beam that is flat, parallel to the road with the spillover hitting the road. With proper alignment, height matters.
Ive started angling my mirrors away from my face to combat this and then changing them back when i get some distance. Bonus points if you can angle them back at the offending driver.
This is the way. The feeling when Jimbob the Confederate Cousinfucker's lifted COMPENSATORMOBILE suddenly falls back due to his own misaligned and blinding headlights...
I always thought the main beams should be where fog lights are located on big trucks. Keep the normal looking headlights in the same place but only have the turn signals and running lights there to keep the truck normal looking.
I don't disagree, but your estimate on what height they should be is off. Most car headlights are over 2ft off the ground. That's actually the minimum height in most states, so 99% of cars are probably higher than 24 inches
Related question: if I'm driving and am blinded by a SUV's headlights being too high, am I morally allowed to turn on my high beams and blind them back?