As a freight forwarder, there are many rules to be adopted and respected: no flames open to the car, try to keep any rivals or other deer protected while driving, lower your large cardboard of the sun before driving, that's the kind of thing. Although I'm not sure which of these exemplary rules are true, I do know of the three driving conditions that are often considered illegal in reality. Love it or not, I'll tell you about them, so prepare accordingly.
Driving Barefoot
Have you ever been barefoot? I won't lie, I did, and I'm not ashamed to say I like it dear it. The folded rubber of the pedal cover feels satisfying, and I think you can get more precise control of your feet with your bare feet.
Almost every time you drive barefoot, however, some paramedics like to say that driving while not riding a motorcycle is illegal. You know, though? Not at all.
No state actually has laws that make illegal driving,
Driving With Interior Dome Light On
This is one of those things that I was told was illegal since I started driving, however, as a criminal admission, it is much closer than, say, murder.
However it is Is it really illegal to drive with your interior dome light? Of course, the light inside the car can damage your vision out car night, but there is no self laws in publications that say it is illegal.
It may be possible to pull something out such as distracted driving, and illuminated interior light may be shown as part of the reason, but until the light inside itself is turned on, no, that is illegal. So have it. Unless you have trouble seeing from the inside, when, however, don't be a fool.
Windows Side By Side Can legally Wrap Part of the Path
When I was a kid growing up in the & # 39; 80s, I remember meeting a lot of cars where the rear windows were only part of the road, just standing still. This was especially impressive for cars like the Volkswagen Rabbit Convertible, which would pull the entire roof but somehow not the top 50 percent of its rear windows:
I've always been told that this is because of some kind of law designed to protect kids in the back seats from introducing themselves through car windows, which I think was a devastating thing in the & # 39; 60s and & # 39; 70s? At least that's how it was always brought to me.
The truth is, though, that there was no such law. The reason this was so frequent – and it has been the norm, with some cars, such as the Chrysler K-Cars, not even letting the rear windows down at all-Because of the lazy engineering of any law.
You see, the rear doors in small cars tend to cut into the rear wheels, which means there's just no room to get the whole window.
Modern cars come up with some solutions for this, such as reducing the size of a Windows drop and having a separate fixed part, or designing precise drag paths (old Beetle signs, for example, hanging the rear windows down rather than dropping them and, consequently, modern cars rarely make rear seat passengers. suffer from slower windows through the door.
And that's totally legal.