Common questions

When do the low beams go on and high beams go off?

When do the low beams go on and high beams go off?

When the lights are on in what should be the low beam position, the high beams are actually on and the high beam indicator on the dash is illuminated. When the light stalk is pulled towards the driver, the high beams stay on and the low beams come on as well. This is only while pulling the stalk back.

Why are my low beam headlights not working?

If a headlight fuse blows, it could cause the headlights to stop working. Most headlight systems are also designed with a relay that switches the power between low beam and high beam headlights. If this relay goes bad, it could allow power to the high beams, but not the low beams.

How does a high beam light bulb work?

Get familiar with the fuses and relays that control your headlights. The headlight switch usually doesn’t control the headlight bulbs directly, but through one or more relays. The headlight switch powers a relay, which powers the headlight bulb. This protects the headlight switch from the high current used by the high beam headlights.

Do you need high beams or low beams?

Low beams are the bare minimum, for safety’s sake, but high beams are an absolute must for night driving over 25 mph. For most vehicles, headlights are a basic electrical system, controlled by switches and relays to turn them on and off.

When the lights are on in what should be the low beam position, the high beams are actually on and the high beam indicator on the dash is illuminated. When the light stalk is pulled towards the driver, the high beams stay on and the low beams come on as well. This is only while pulling the stalk back.

If a headlight fuse blows, it could cause the headlights to stop working. Most headlight systems are also designed with a relay that switches the power between low beam and high beam headlights. If this relay goes bad, it could allow power to the high beams, but not the low beams.

Get familiar with the fuses and relays that control your headlights. The headlight switch usually doesn’t control the headlight bulbs directly, but through one or more relays. The headlight switch powers a relay, which powers the headlight bulb. This protects the headlight switch from the high current used by the high beam headlights.

Low beams are the bare minimum, for safety’s sake, but high beams are an absolute must for night driving over 25 mph. For most vehicles, headlights are a basic electrical system, controlled by switches and relays to turn them on and off.

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Ruth Doyle