The change
Well, honey, a car is definitely opaque. Unless you're driving some fancy futuristic invisible car that I haven't heard about yet, then you can't see through it. So, unless you're in a sci-fi movie, stick with the good ol' opaque cars on the road.
When something is acted upon by an outside force so it would be like if you are swinging and a ball is thrown at you, you slow down because that ball hit you.More examples:The ever popular brake one. When you brake your car suddenly you go flying right? Well hopefully you'd be wearing your seat belt because that would be the outside force. The seat belt stops you from flying through the windshield. If not, then the windshield is the outside force slowing you down. That's the most obvious one. Think of a ball and a bat (above answer)... or a boulder rolling down a hill.Okay another example is when, say in a car ride you go around one of those on-ramp things in a circle, you get pressed up against the side of the car right? That is inertia because your body wants to go straight but the outside force (aka the car) is turning you. I hope that helps!
Most leaves are opaque (you can't see through them), but many are translucent (sort of see through them).
because of freezing,zohaib zulfiqar
You can see it if you look through the windshield on the driver's side.
Technically, you don't "drive" through a car was, the car is in neutral and you are moved through. But, as for your question, if the windshield is cracked enough for water to get through, I wouldn't do it.
How else would you see through the front of it. -Try driving a car with no windshield, you don't have to go fast to be almost blinded by wind.
The windshield wipers were invented to wipe things off your car so you can see
You can see it from outside the car drivers side at bottom of windshield
that's just a dumb question
a windshield.
Answeron drivers side dashboard look through windshield It is not on the drivers side dashboard, therefore one can not see it through the windshield.
usually if youre looking at the car, it will be in the bottom right on the dashboard of the car, look through the windshield.
That will depend on WHICH cartridge is used, the distance to the windshield, and the angle of impact. Under some circumstances even the lowly .22 LR will penetrate a windshield.
It wouldn't be a good idea. Windex will streak, severely, in turn impairing your vision through the windshield.
They could see through the window better...