I used to call them ****** lights until I moved up to the Cape.
On many occasions during the wet season my lights where under water and its usually when there is a fair bit of flow on the car, requiring constant corrections on your heading... crossing the Archer river at night is bad enough but when you have nothing but a 10ft green/brown haze in front of your bonnet and cant see the exit point....W..nker lights are handy.
Travelling on wet dirt roads for 4 or 5 months of the year the W..ker lights stay cleaner for a lot longer. They do actually reduce shadowing a lot, which is very relaxing when you are doing several hundred kms on the dirt. Being able to distinguishe between a small undulation and a huge hole within the first hundred metres in front of you is reassuring.
I have always wondered how they are more annoying than any spottie left on by on coming traffic. If they are set up correctly they are actually less likely to offend on coming traffic,, Technically they are pointing slightly downwards to light up the same visual zone that is required for effective braking,, oe if you like the focus zone for most drivers. Compared to low set lights which have ther beam set almost parralel to the ground in comparison.
However I have moved back to Adelaide now and they have been relocated back to the bar, Horse's for course's![]()




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) similar to what traffic lights have so you cant see the lights from wrong angle, or those cone shaped collars you put on a dog when it is biting itself, like the brim of a hat, could be put at the bottom to reduce the glare on the bonnet.

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