MHarryE
Elite Member
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2009
- Messages
- 2,970
- Location
- Northeastern Minnesota
- Tractor
- Kubota M7-171, M5-111, SVL75-2, RTV900XT & GR2120; CaseIH 1680 combine
Rear fogs like that are common on European cars. Really useful in low viz conditions - blizzard or fog, day or night. That setup presumes the driver is capable of turning a switch On/Off at the relevant time... so domestic manufacturers don't bother installing them here. About 15 years back, there was a really bad pileup in daytime fog, on the 401 in Western Ontario. I remember reading a really haunting account of the aftermath, told by a guy who managed to get his truck clear by driving well off the shoulder. I wish rear fog lights were common here, they would have helped quite a bit in that situation. Rgds, D.
Rear fogs are REQUIRED on European cars, not just common. When I checked into bringing my European car into the U.S., one thing I would have needed to do was to disable the rear fogs. There were so many things I traded for an American spec car before returning but I could only use it for 30 days in Europe due to it not meeting European safety standards. I having driven in so much fog in Europe and loved the visibility of the rear fogs, I can't understand why America thinks it's a bad thing. Just like not having the rears lit when a car is equipped with daytime running lights. I need to keep reminding my wife about that because she thinks all the lights are on all the time.