Correct Mirror Placement
#41
Originally Posted by CBR2200,Oct 25 2006, 08:01 AM
I am simply offering that you can be safe right now by adjusting your mirrors correctly.
Generally, owners have always agreed (in every thread ever written on this subject) that correct mirror adjustment is essential... however... for some drivers correct mirror adjustment in itself is not enough to sufficiently address any safety ('blind spot') issues.
If this were the case, as you state, then we wouldn't be seeing so many owners installing convex mirrors.
#42
What I've done from the beginning, since I first got my license, was pushing the mirrors out all the way. I'm the only one to do this in my house...I Don't go as far as sticking my ear against the side window to adjust, but I push the mirrors out enough that by looking out, I can't see the sides of my car at all, but if I lean a bit in the direction i'm looking at, I see a little bit of the rear quarter of the car. I have it set up like that on both driver and passenger's side. I don't want to push it out much more, because I'm constantly parallel parking and do tilt the mirrors down to avoid curb rash (already hit one wheel after 1 week of driving the car, don't want it to happen again). I don't want to have to re-adjust the mirrors every time, it's easier to just raise it up and down instead of in and down, then back out and up.
#45
Originally Posted by kpxplaya415,Feb 11 2008, 04:45 AM
Agreed
ps - in this image - the stock mirror is adjusted incorrectly!
50% of the image is the car - if you moved the mirror out, you'd see the whole garage even without convex mirrors...
#48
Our race instructor gave us a pretty straight forward method that has worked great for me. I do have the JDM mirror too.
Driver side: you put your head to the to the window and adjust so you can see the edge of your car (prolly all the way out).
Passenger side: you put your head to the imaginary line in the center of the car (as if you had a window there) and adjust so you can see the edge of your car.
That's all. Kills any sign of blind spottage.
Driver side: you put your head to the to the window and adjust so you can see the edge of your car (prolly all the way out).
Passenger side: you put your head to the imaginary line in the center of the car (as if you had a window there) and adjust so you can see the edge of your car.
That's all. Kills any sign of blind spottage.
#49
Here's a good write up - it even mentions an S2000 - http://www.linquist.net/motorsports/tech/mirrors/