Driving vision Information
A1 Fitness to drive involves your sight more than anything else. Look after your eyes and use spectacle help where you can. Colour Blindness ? For people who confuse red and green, brake lights and traffic lights become harder to identify. For most people, their vision deteriorates too slowly to notice. Your optometrist will advise you at your next eye examination. Remember, too, to clean your windscreen on the inside as well.
Eye strain? Eyestrain develops over a time: long journeys present the hardest demands. If your eyes are tried, taken a break from your journey, and take an eye test.
Tunnel vision? Fortunately rare and its development is insidious but easy to measure in minutes by your optometrist.
Long or short sighted? Both need correcting for safe driving. Most short
Sighted people wear glasses, but the danger group are the over 50's whose long sight is drifting into blur.
Clear vision safe driving
As a minimum legal requirement, motorists must be able to read a numberplate from a distance of 20.5 meters (67.6 feet) and have 120 degree wide field of view. This test is normally only carried out officially at the time of the driving test and again for licence renewal at the age of 70. Recent research has shown that more than 10 per cent of drivers would fail a driving test due to poor sight if they re-took it today. In law it is a driver's responsibility to ensure that they can pass the numberplate test at all times. they must also be able to see clearly out of the corners of their eyes, see clearly at night and not have double vision. It's important to remember that if you fail to meet these visual standards you are breaking the law every time you start your engine. For drivers, the important of having a regular eye examination (at least once every two years) is obvious particularly bearing in mind that people's eyesight changes over time.
If you do need to wear spectacles or contact lenses to meet the visual standard for driving , it's vital to ensure you wear them at all times. This may sound obvious but every day tens of thousands of motorists drive with out their glasses because of vanity, or because they have forgotten them, or because they are only driving a short distance. No matter what the reason, these people are breaking the law and are a potential danger to themselves and other road users.