Trophycummins
Adventurer
I ran the mojave rd this past weekend with some buddies.
I would like to stress to the expo community the necessity of a dust light in the southwest, as well as some forward facing visibility lights.
We ran into a few "overland" rigs moving at a slower pace than we were, and we could not find the vehicle in the dust cloud, or see any of their lights. Therefore we could not make a safe pass until the rigs in front of us were aware of our presence and pulled over.
At one point we pulled up behind a light gray suburban which was the exact color of the dust and we couldn't see him at all.
A dust light should always be running any time you're driving in an ohv area and a faster rig might come up behind you to overtake. It's safety.
A couple examples.
A time lapse of a friend I followed to show how much a simple $10 Amber amazon light helps in the thick dust.
https://vimeo.com/192403355
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
I would like to stress to the expo community the necessity of a dust light in the southwest, as well as some forward facing visibility lights.
We ran into a few "overland" rigs moving at a slower pace than we were, and we could not find the vehicle in the dust cloud, or see any of their lights. Therefore we could not make a safe pass until the rigs in front of us were aware of our presence and pulled over.
At one point we pulled up behind a light gray suburban which was the exact color of the dust and we couldn't see him at all.
A dust light should always be running any time you're driving in an ohv area and a faster rig might come up behind you to overtake. It's safety.
A couple examples.
A time lapse of a friend I followed to show how much a simple $10 Amber amazon light helps in the thick dust.
https://vimeo.com/192403355
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk