Daily Mail

So THAT’S why you find car headlights so painfully blinding

- By JOHN NAISH

ANYONE who drives at night knows the problem. An approachin­g car rounds a bend or crests a hill and a dazzling glare fills the windscreen and you can’t see.

It is extremely frightenin­g and several seconds may elapse before your night vision recovers — putting your own life and those of other road users in danger.

The phenomenon is being blamed on carmakers fitting ever more powerful headlights as a ‘safety’ marketing feature. But research shows that because of the basic mechanics of our eyes, the older you are, the easier it is to be temporaril­y blinded.

The danger first arose when soft yellow halogen headlamps (which produce light when a filament is heated) began to be superseded by stronger Xenon or High Intensity Discharge (HID) lights in the early Nineties. These produce a harsh blue light that is typically twice as bright.

An even brighter generation of Light Emitting Diode (LED) lights started to appear in 2006. These work by passing an electric current through a capsule of gas or via electromag­netic energy and are fitted to a lot of new cars.

Headlight glare is involved in more accidents and deaths, according to government figures.

One factor contributi­ng to accidents that British police record is ‘dazzling headlamps’.

In 2014, investigat­ors reported this as an influence in ten fatal crashes, nearly 70 serious accidents and more than 250 other accidents. Overall, this was an increase of 11 per cent on 2010.

Campaigner­s say glare may cause many more minor accidents, which are often unattended by police and go unrecorded.

Roy Milnes, 70, from Pwllheli, North Wales, runs the pressure group Lightmare, which is campaignin­g to have light levels from modern headlights lowered. ‘We get thousands of complaints,’ he says. ‘The brightness has gone beyond human endurance.’

Glare can even cause a pain-like reaction, according to Dr Peter Heilig, a professor of ophthalmol­ogy at the University of Vienna.

‘Glare sends a warning signal to the brain that says “Stop!” ’ he says. ‘It is comparable to the pain signal you get when you suddenly overstrain a joint.’ In response, you may wince or even inadverten­tly shut your eyes.

Are modern headlights really so much worse? Yes, says Professor Heilig. ‘The stark blue light has much higher energy — ie, it looks much brighter — than halogen bulbs, due to it having a much shorter wavelength.’

The effect of the glare of modern lights is greater as we grow older, according to John Marshall, professor of ophthalmol­ogy at University College London.

The main problem is light scatter. The eye’s lens and cornea are not perfectly clear, so when bright light is shone through them, some gets scattered around the inside of the eye, making images blurred or blank.

‘It is the same effect you get from trying to look at a bright light through a misted-up windscreen,’ says Professor Marshall. ‘The older you are, the more changes you get, even to healthy eyes, such as the lens and cornea becoming less clear, so the more problems you will have seeing clearly.

‘At night your pupil opens wider to let in more light, and when your eye meets a headlamp you get more scatter and can’t see.’

Disability glare, when light is scattered inside the eye, was identified in 1927. That it is exacerbate­d by modern headlamps was discovered ten years ago in a report by the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion. This found it can take as long as ten seconds to recover fully.

CAR-MAkERS have tried fitting HID lamps with beam-focusing lenses and self- levelling systems, which aim to angle beams down to prevent cars blinding oncoming drivers when cresting hills.

But Rob Marshall, a technical adviser with the Uk road safety organisati­on GEM Motoring Assist, warns these systems are less than perfect: ‘They take time to react, so an oncoming driver can be blinded temporaril­y.’

The Society of Motor Manufactur­ers and Traders maintains there is no evidence that factory fitted high-power lights distract drivers and that lamp-levelling technology ensures they are safe.

It adds that they are particular­ly important on poorly lit roads.

But the Government acknowledg­es there may be a problem. The Department for Transport says the Uk has won agreement for a ‘glare’ group as part of the United Nations expert group on vehicle lighting.

The group is set to produce results at the end of this year. However, it is so far only considerin­g standards for the next generation of LED headlamps — ie, those not already in use.

In the meantime, Professor Marshall suggests drivers might consider wearing clear glasses — prescripti­on or not — with a UVabsorben­t coating, available from High Street opticians.

‘You can only tell that spectacles have this coating because they have a slight blue sheen,’ he says. ‘I wear them myself.’

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