Can I Wear Color Blind Glasses for Driver's License Physical Examination?
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You can wear color blind glasses for the driver's license physical examination, but whether you can pass the examination depends on the results of the relevant tests. If wearing a pair of color blind glasses allows you to accurately recognize the color blindness test cards, the examiner will determine whether you pass. However, if you still cannot accurately identify the color blindness test cards while wearing color blind glasses, you will not pass the physical examination and will not be able to obtain a driver's license. According to Article 11 of the "Regulations on the Application and Use of Motor Vehicle Driver's Licenses," the physical examination items for learning to drive include: 1. Height: Applicants for large buses, tractors, city buses, large trucks, or trolleybuses must be at least 155 cm tall. Applicants for medium-sized buses must be at least 150 cm tall. This is the first step in the physical examination for learning to drive. 2. Vision: Applicants for large buses, tractors, city buses, medium-sized buses, large trucks, trolleybuses, or trams must have naked or corrected visual acuity of at least 5.0 on the logarithmic visual acuity chart. Applicants for other types of vehicles must have naked or corrected visual acuity of at least 4.9 on the logarithmic visual acuity chart. 3. Color Vision: No red-green color blindness. This is consistent with the vision requirements in the physical examination for learning to drive. 4. Hearing: Able to distinguish the direction of sound sources with each ear at a distance of 50 cm from a tuning fork. 5. Upper Limbs: Both thumbs must be intact, and each hand must have at least three other fingers intact, with normal limb and finger movement functions. 6. Lower Limbs: Normal movement function. Applicants for manual transmission vehicles must have lower limbs no longer than 5 cm. Applicants for automatic transmission vehicles must have a sound right lower limb. 7. Trunk and Neck: No movement dysfunction.