Does Parking in Reverse Have to Be Exactly in the Middle?
1 Answers
No, as long as you don't cross the lines during the reversing process. Here are the specific techniques for parking in reverse: Identify the starting point: Take right-side parking as an example. The distance between the car at the starting position and the left line should be 1.2-1.8 meters, the steering wheel should be straight, and the car body should be parallel to the left line. When reversing, use the bottom edge of the left rearview mirror as a reference. When the two coincide, turn the steering wheel fully to the right and continue reversing. Control the corner point: Watch the right rearview mirror. When you spot the corner point of the parking space, pay attention to the changing distance between the corner point and the car body. When the distance is less than 30 cm, turn the steering wheel back half a turn and continue reversing. Once the car body enters the parking space and is parallel to the parking lines, turn the steering wheel back one full turn. If the distance is not less than 30 cm, don't turn the steering wheel back. Keep reversing until the car body is parallel to the parking lines, then turn the steering wheel back one and a half turns at once.