This. I cannot drive, but when my mother would drive me around, we hated it when this would happen.When a giant vehicle parks right next to you in the lot and you have to take forever to back out at a snail's pace because you can't see if anyone is incoming.
What helped for me was back-up cameras. I had one vehicle I regularly drive that didn't originally have a back-up camera. When I updated the stereo to a multimedia player with a screen, I added a cheap back-up camera from Amazon, that I located right above the rear license plate.When a giant vehicle parks right next to you in the lot and you have to take forever to back out at a snail's pace because you can't see if anyone is incoming.
Agreed.I think drivers are becoming too dependent on backup cameras or any sort of cameras in general.
I think they lose 'situational awareness' by focusing too much on what's on the screen and not what's around them.
I've been driving thirty plus years and I can parallel park and back in and out of parking stalls using my rear view mirror and driver/passenger mirror with no problem.
You must not own a car, or been in a situation with bad visibility from the sides. The rear passenger compartment of the Ford Mustang has side windows that are tiny and located behind large door pillars that house the shoulder harness. I also have a 1 ton high profile crew cab pickup with an 8-foot bed. The camera allows me to see objects behind, and below the tail gate, that you can't see because of blind spots. If I'm parked between two vehicles in a parking lot, where you can't see side to side, the backup camera allows me to see what is behind me from the perspective of the back bumper, rather than waiting until my vehicle is over halfway out of a parking spot, when the front passenger windows have cleared what is blocking my side to side view. I've only been driving for over 50 years, and cars from the before the 1970s didn't have those large pillars between the front and rear side glass for shoulder harness retraction mechanisms. My 2016 vehicles also have warning lights in the side mirrors to prevent entering into an occupied lane with a car beside me in a blind spot, and have warning tones when I'm in reverse and getting close to other objects. The backup camera in my pickup allows me to easily back up and hook up to a trailer, without the need for a spotter to guide me in.I think drivers are becoming too dependent on backup cameras or any sort of cameras in general.
I think they lose 'situational awareness' by focusing too much on what's on the screen and not what's around them.
I've been driving thirty plus years and I can parallel park and back in and out of parking stalls using my rear view mirror and driver/passenger mirror with no problem.


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