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Automakers Push for Advanced Adaptive Headlights

In the not too distant future, U.S. automakers may be given the opportunity to incorporate adaptive-driving-beam headlights into new vehicles they sell that provide an advancement from the automatic high beam technology available today.

December 3, 2018
Automakers Push for Advanced Adaptive Headlights

Federal safety regulators are moving to amend a rule that would allow advanced adaptive-beam-headlights in vehicles.

Photo courtesy of NHTSA.

1 min to read


In the not too distant future, U.S. automakers may be given the opportunity to incorporate adaptive-driving-beam headlights into new vehicles they sell that provide an advancement from the automatic high beam technology available today, according to a report from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.

The push for change to a current Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard for headlights (FMVSS 108) comes from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

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In October, after a petition from Toyota to amend the safety standard for lighting, NHTSA proposed modifying FMVSS 108 to set performance standards and compliance tests for adaptive-driving-beam headlights.

Presently, federal rules require distinct high- and low-beam patterns. Therefore, FMVSS 108 prohibits adaptive-driving-beams because they dynamically adjust. Specifically, rather than switching the high beams on and off, they continuously adjust the high-beam pattern to create a shadow around other vehicles, based on input from a forward-looking camera.

The IIHS encourages rulemaking that allows for more advanced headlights, noting that adaptive-driving-beams provide high-beam visibility without the hazardous glare for oncoming drivers.  Moreover, adaptive-driving-beams are currently used in Europe and Japan.

In the event FMVSS 108 is amended, manufacturers who already offer adaptive-driving-beam headlights on vehicles sold in other countries would be required to modify their systems for the U.S. market to meet NHTSA's test criteria.

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