Texan Tundra Revisited: The Feature the Toyota Tundra 1794 Edition Had that ... - TechnologyTell

var tt_sections =... Well, it ought to be. Just like this feature controlled by a discrete wheel on the dashboard ought to be standard on every full-size pickup truck. Let me tell you, there are few things more annoying to me as a motorist than to have a hulking truck behind me at night with its headlights boring a hole into my brain because they’re shining straight into my back window and rearview mirrors. This little feature has the potential to make that problem a thing of the past, so long as the truck’s driver is courteous. (Good luck with that, but we can dream, can’t we. ). So here’s how it works: You’re driving down a country road. There on the dash of the Toyota Tundra 1794 Edition is an up/down roller wheel that will adjust the headlights’ aim. Roll it all the way up when there’s no traffic around to make your headlights illuminate the maximum amount of road ahead. You reach back over to that wheel and crank it down a few clicks, and you watch as the headlights’ cutoff line sinks down the back window of the hatch. I have no idea whether the motorists I caught up to on the road even noticed my use of this feature. Source: www.technologytell.com