monsta said:Am I missing something or is there no way to turn on the interior lights other than open the door or use them individually?
was98strat said:LOL
Try using the Switch locate right by Either the map lights (front) or the dome light (middle)
monsta said:I know how to operate the lights individually.
I was looking for the "switch" to turn them all on is all. Guess there isn't one.
Good call on the key fob. I'll have to try it.
Kinda silly omission to me. If someone needs to see their child in the back at night there is no way for them to turn on the back light. Well...there isn't a switch for it anyway...
was98strat said:sorry, if I sounded "off" but you didn't ask about a way to turn them ALL on at the same time, you just asked if there was a way to turn on interior lights. I would agree with the other poster about using the keyfob. besides you would want to turn them all on while you're driving, that's incredibly unsafe!
monsta said:My orginal post ...or use them individually.
Key fob trick doesn't work.
Lights on are not necessarily unsafe and certainly not incredibly unsafe!
was98strat said:Actually it is Incredibly unsafe. Here are the reasons why
1) Needing lights means it's night time. Turning on the lights ruins your light vision for an extended period of time
2) turning on the lights means you are trying to do something in the car that takes your attention away from the road
Yes the ke\y fob doesn't work when it's in the ignition (I suspect for the reas\ons outlined above)
just my $0.02 worth
Exactly.rodslinger said:....or you are stopped in a dark area and don't want to open the door to activate the lights and don't want to get out of the driver seat in the event you gotta haul ass out of there... Sometimes you just want to turn on the damn lights.
rodslinger said:....or you are stopped in a dark area and don't want to open the door to activate the lights and don't want to get out of the driver seat in the event you gotta haul ass out of there... Sometimes you just want to turn on the damn lights.
was98strat said:general rant
rodslinger said:While I don't necessarily disagree with your points, I do usually bring up the other point of view just to make sure all opinions are covered.
My problem with the assumption that the interior light will create problems with night vision is that you aren't using true night vision when driving a vehicle at night. Real night vision is used when walking at night under moonlight with no artificial lighting, or walking thought your house at night with no lights. Driving a 3000 pound rolling flashlight with potentially 300 watts of forward lighting is not the same. You are more or less in a mixed mode using both rods and cones for visual performance.
Real night vision does take 45 minutes to several hours to adjust depending on previous conditions. But lighting transitions experienced during driving such as passing an oncoming vehicle at night or going into/out of a tunnel are adjusted to very quickly. Usually under a second.
If adjusting to an interior light were such a problem then we would all be experiencing serious issues after each pair of headlights in our eyes we pass each night. God forbid I end up in a ditch after passing that well lit gas station and can't see my next turn.
My opinion is that glare and object reflection on the glass from interior lighting is more of a problem than adjust to the subtle lighting change.
You want to take up a cause... Those DRL lights you Canuks started using up there is a pain in the ass for us down here in the states for auto makers that started to adopt them. I come across so many drivers with DRL equipped vehicles that fail to turn on the full headlights during rain and night driving conditions. I guess these idiots don't realize that DRL's usually don't actiave the tail and side markers making them invisible from the rear during rain and while driving at night.