Imagine driving at night when, all of a sudden, the headlights of another car, which you swear were not nearly as bright a few years ago, I'm sure you could be blinded at this time.
Numerous people complain that this recent development has become inconvenient
You should not rely on people prioritizing safety on the road; many aren't even aware of it. This lack of awareness can leave you momentarily squinting or even blinded by oncoming headlights.
Therefore, if you drive at night and see a car coming from the opposite direction, you should lower your beams.
However, many people don't understand why headlights are so bright these days.
According to Hill, the manufacturer changed the car's headlights from soft orange halogen to more blue-colored LED lights, which is why the car has brighter headlights now.
In the US, trucks and SUVs are especially common, and they all have pretty bright headlights.
In the interview with New York, Mark Rea, a professor at the Icahn School of Medicine, said, "Imagine a car with two headlights: one halogen and one LED. They’d both meet the requirements. The light meter would say they’re the same, but the LED would look 40% brighter."
These claims were backed up by Daniel Stern, chief editor of Driving Vision News, who told the New York Times in 2019: "Tall pickups and SUVs and short, small cars are simultaneously popular.
"The eyes in the low car are going to get zapped hard by the lamps mounted up high on the SUV or truck every time."
Not only do trucks and SUVs have this problem; headlights have "absolutely gotten brighter," according to expert Matt Kossoff, founder and chief product officer of The Retrofit Source, a vehicle light distribution company, who spoke with the New York Times.
The Soft Lights Foundation has more than 52,000 signatures on a petition calling for an absolute ban on "blinding headlights" due to the severity of the issue in recent years.