Do I need to pull the handbrake after parallel parking?
1 Answers
Pulling the handbrake after parallel parking will result in point deduction, so it is not necessary to pull the handbrake. The point deduction items for parallel parking include the vehicle body crossing the line after stopping in the parking space, stopping midway, and the tires touching the lane boundary line while driving. Among these, if the vehicle body crosses the line after stopping in the parking space or stops midway, 100 points will be deducted directly, resulting in test failure. If the tires touch the lane boundary line while driving, 10 points will be deducted. Parallel parking is one of the contents of the second subject of the driver's license test. Parallel parking is becoming increasingly common in cities, especially when parking spaces in formal parking lots are becoming more scarce. Many places have turned the original streets into parking spaces, forming "parallel parking spaces". After the implementation of the new traffic regulations, parallel parking no longer uses poles but adopts ground markings as the boundary of the parking space. For students learning the C1 driver's license, the length of the parallel parking space is 1.5 times the length of the vehicle plus 1 meter. Drive the vehicle to the front of the parking space parallel to the direction of travel, then reverse into the parking space to the right rear without any pauses. As long as the parallel parking is within this range and does not cross the boundary line of the parking space, it is considered a pass.