What Does Flashing One's Headlights Mean to You?

I follow the example of lorry and van drivers and flash my hazard warning lights once after passing to say thanks to someone who pulled over to let me pass.

I haven’t seen this here in the USA. When I learned to drive, there was no such thing as hazard warning lights—for that matter, turn signals were rare. Those were the bad old days.

So pretty much anything?

Only time I have ever seen flashing headlights is to warn of a speed trap ahead.

Pretty much :stuck_out_tongue:

I suppose I would have been better off stating that the only use I would not have for flashing headlights is to ask to pass.

In India, it’s a polite way of requesting to pass the slower car in front of you. We honk all the time too, although headlights are considered more polite. Plus, with headlights you can give warning from far behind the car in front of you, which gives enough time for the slower driver to move off the fast lane.

Flashing headlights to the car on the opposite side of the road (at night) is a request for the other driver to turn off high-beam and switch to low beam. We often drive with high-beams on. Flashing the opposite driver in the day is sometimes to inform the other driver that they forgot to switch off their headlights. We do not drive with headlights on in the daytime, and if you drive with your headlights on in the daytime in India, you’ll find strangers frantically waving out to you trying to inform you that your lights are on.

…if ‘continental’ includes any road within 60 miles of London :wink:

The L-R-L system seems to me to be the more common one (and the one used by continental lorry drivers, of which we have plenty around here). Maybe this is due to hazard lights more commonly being used for the ‘queue up ahead, start braking’ indication?

In Italy, too. My Italian cousin admits to several very ‘inefficient’ weeks after arriving in Britain, until he figured this one out.

Huh? How can waving be easier than flicking the lights?

If you are in Alaska, flashing headlights from an oncoming car more than likely means there is a moose near the road ahead. There are over 600 moose collisions annually, at a cost of over $9 million dollars. If you have ever seen a car that has collided with a moose, you will take notice and slow down.

Is that because of the plethora of lorries from the Continent coming off ferries and the Chunnel or just common practise in SE England?

I’ve seen that one too come to think of it, I just chose one over the other. Using the L-R-L would be easier than reaching for the hazards though.