jersey_emt
Member
- :
- 04 MSM #1089
If your mirrors are adjusted properly you will have no blind spot in most vehicles, and only a tiny blind spot (smaller than even a motorcycle) in all but very few vehicles.
Hardly anybody has their side mirrors adjusted properly. If you can see the side of your car in the mirrors from your normal driving position they are not adjusted properly. They need to be tilted out much farther. Mine are out as far as they can, and when the top is up (I drive a Miata) and the rear visibility is not good at all, I can watch a motorcycle drive past without ever losing sight of it. When it's far enough behind me, I see it in the rear-view mirror. When the front wheel disappears from view in that mirror, the front wheel appears in the (properly adjusted) side mirror. When the front wheel disappears from view in the side mirror, the most of the bike is already in my peripheral vision.
Hardly anybody has their side mirrors adjusted properly. If you can see the side of your car in the mirrors from your normal driving position they are not adjusted properly. They need to be tilted out much farther. Mine are out as far as they can, and when the top is up (I drive a Miata) and the rear visibility is not good at all, I can watch a motorcycle drive past without ever losing sight of it. When it's far enough behind me, I see it in the rear-view mirror. When the front wheel disappears from view in that mirror, the front wheel appears in the (properly adjusted) side mirror. When the front wheel disappears from view in the side mirror, the most of the bike is already in my peripheral vision.