How many points are deducted for less than thirty centimeters?
2 Answers
For the driving license test, in the slope section of Subject 2, if the distance is greater than thirty centimeters but less than fifty centimeters, 10 points are deducted. Slope parking test requirements: It actually includes two test items: first, the fixed-point parking on the uphill road, and then the starting and driving on the slope. For fixed-point parking, the front bumper of the vehicle must be in the middle of the yellow line for fixed-point parking, and the bumper must not exceed or fall short of the yellow line by more than 50 centimeters. The right wheels must stop between the edge yellow line and the white line (width of 30 centimeters). For slope starting, the vehicle must not roll back more than 30 centimeters. Slope fixed-point scoring criteria: Parking outside the 50-centimeter range of the fixed-point parking line results in a 20-point deduction; rolling back more than 30 centimeters results in failure; stalling the engine results in a 20-point deduction; parking outside the 30-centimeter range on the right side results in a 20-point deduction; once the gear is engaged during starting, failure to leave the original spot within 60 seconds results in failure.
This parking violation thing, well, I’ve taken a fall myself once. When parking by the roadside, I misjudged the distance—my car was over 30 cm from the curb, and bam, a ticket slapped me with a 3-point deduction and a 200-yuan fine. Traffic regulations clearly state that the right-side wheels of a vehicle must not exceed 30 cm from the roadside; going beyond that counts as illegal parking because it can easily block traffic and make it hard for other cars to pass. I used to think parking casually was no big deal, but I learned the hard way. Now, before parking, I either use a mobile app to estimate the distance or ask an experienced driver for guidance. When driving, I’ve made it a habit to slow down when nearing the curb, keeping the wheels as close as possible but leaving a little space to avoid scraping the curb—otherwise, it’s bad for the car and costs points. Remember this rule—it saves hassle, keeps things smooth, and ensures safety.