Thursday, Dec 13th 2007 by Vincent Nguyen


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Alright, now you are probably wondering why the picture of the BMW X-Series SUV? Look at the rear-view mirror, there they are, the pair of head-light looking things, those are the Rayzer lights.

rayzer_by_visualeyes_03

They offer an even higher beam of light than your high beams, and they aren’t on all the time, they are wirelessly synched with your high beams, so only when you turn your brights on do these lights come on. And, if traffic approaches, they can automatically detect that and turn themselves off.

They claim they triple the area you can see, and that sounds about right, so, if you drive on dark, dank roads frequently where you use your high-beams a lot, you might consider these. Distribution starts next year, no word on price though.

Rayzer Triples Driving Visibility, Surprised Deers [via Gizmodo]

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  1.  driving course   View all comments by driving course  Neutral  Add karma Subtract karma Quote

    Hi James
    This looks like a great idea. I’m sure that bad night vision/visibility is a contributory factor to many accidents.
    If you’ve any further info/links I’d be very interested to see them.
    Thanks.

  2.  hey   View all comments by hey  Neutral  Add karma Subtract karma Quote

    gizmodo covered this. Not sure what to think until I see it in action. company url is http://www.visualeyes.se.. also found a product sheet at http://www.visualeyes.se/filer/product_sheet.pdf

    karan


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