Local

High beams clearly improve visibility, a key factor in safe driving

Question: I’m concerned about pedestrians getting killed on the road. I think the lack of use of high-beam lights is likely the cause of the drivers not seeing the pedestrians. I have a problem for you to solve. How far do typical low-beam lights light the road ahead and how long does it take the average driver to stop their car traveling at 50 mph? Could these lives have been spared had the drivers just used their high beam lights?

Answer: Having just experienced the darkest day of the year (we always call it the shortest day, but it’s still 24 hours long so that’s not really accurate, is it?) it seems appropriate to talk about headlights. With over 15 hours of darkness in every day this week, there’s a good chance that some of your driving will be in the dark.

The law requires that high-beam headlights are “of such an intensity as to reveal persons and vehicles at a distance of four hundred fifty feet ahead ....” Low beams are required to provide 150 feet of visibility. Car manufacturers have to engineer their vehicles to meet the requirements of the law, so let’s accept those distances as minimums for every new car on the road. But unless you’re driving a relatively new car, those distances may not apply to you.

You’ll only achieve the same visibility as the day your car rolled off the assembly line if your lighting system is in the same condition. Over time the brightness of a headlight decreases a bit, headlight alignment can get out of adjustment (which matters a lot more than you might think), and that plastic lens that protects your bulb can get hazy. Just a small amount of misalignment can result in a loss of many feet of visibility, and research from AAA found that clouded or yellowed lenses produce as little as 20% of the amount of light compared to when the lights were new. We mostly think about maintaining our headlights when they burn out, but even what seems like a functioning light might not be providing the visibility it was once capable of.

Just working from the distances required by law, we can get a rough idea of how fast is too fast for your headlights. Keep in mind these numbers are based on dry pavement, straight and level roadway, and an attentive driver. The real world results could easily be worse, but won’t likely be better.

The stopping distance for a car traveling 37 mph is 150 feet, so there’s our limit for driving using low beams. At 50 mph, as you asked, stopping distance is 235 feet; clearly way too fast to see a hazard in time while using low beams. At 75 mph you’ll have a stopping distance of 446 feet, barely under the required visibility for high beam headlights. But you don’t want to drive right at the limit, because the moment circumstances change you’re over it. Road conditions can change rapidly, and overdriving your headlights puts you in a situation with no good exit strategy when a hazard appears.

As to whether pedestrian lives could have been saved by drivers using their high beams, without seeing the details of each crash I just don’t know. But we do know that visibility is a critical aspect of safe driving. Unfortunately, pedestrian fatalities have increased over the past several years. As drivers, we have the responsibility, both legally and morally, to do whatever we can (including maximizing our seeing distance) to avoid a collision with a pedestrian.

This story was originally published December 28, 2020 at 5:00 AM with the headline "High beams clearly improve visibility, a key factor in safe driving."

Follow More of Our Reporting on

Related Stories from Tri-City Herald
Doug Dahl
The Bellingham Herald
Doug Dahl is the director of communications for the Washington Traffic Safety Commission.
Get one year of unlimited digital access for $159.99
#ReadLocal

Only 44¢ per day

SUBSCRIBE NOW