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You probably already know, but always worth a mention: you need to carry spare bulbs for all your lights when riding in France.

...you need to carry spare bulbs for all your lights when riding in France.
...You probably already know, but always worth a mention: you need to carry spare bulbs for all your lights when riding in France.
Has anyone bothered to correct the left hand dipping to comply with driving abroad, if so what can be done? I would like to drive without blinding oncoming traffic. Thank, Dave
turns out that a lot of bike lights especially the more modern ones are neutral biased, and do not normally require converters, apparently the offence is dazzling oncoming vehicles rather than having a incorrectly biased dip beam, I have even found some indication that 2 wheel vehicles are excluded from the converter rule, have to admit I haven't used converters on bikes ever. YMMVAll lights are biased to the side of the road you ride on. If you look you can see the shape of the dipped beam pattern which forms a 'v' shape with the horizontal part of the 'v' across the right so oncomming traffic are not dazzled.
For driving on the right you rotate the low beam light unit so that the horizontal part of the 'v' is on the left.
You will also need to have the correct size fluorescent stickers fitted to your helmet, or you will get fined. France needs all the money it can get and fining foreign drivers/riders is an easy way to get money.
http://ukfrancebikers.com/2013/03/16/france-compulsory-reflective-stickers-on-all-helmets/