Because cars created with the ignition on the right side of the steering wheel universally, there yet no cars built specifically for left handed drivers.
Yes, Germany's cars is left hand drive
We drive on the left, so use rhd cars.
Cars in France are left hand drive (traffic drives on the right hand side of the road)
Yes. Yes, drivers in Ireland (North & South) drive on the left. The only difference between the two are the road signs. The signs in the Irish Republic use kilometers (metric) for distances and speed limits, while the signs in the North (UK) use miles (imperial).
Of course. Nearly all cars in the United States are left-hand drive.
The flow of traffic is on the left-hand side of the road, but vehicles with the drivers controls on either the left or the right are lawful.
Most UK rental cars are right hand drive but the larger rental companies carry left hand drive cars for overseas visitors who are more accustomed to the style. You do have to specifically request one and it is recommended that you reserve it before your trip to make sure no one else drives off with it.
Not officially that I can find. But several tuning companies have converted one to left hand drive.
Cars in Northern Ireland drive on the left hand side of the road.
i think its because the majority of rally drivers live in countries that drive on the left only
There are many places where one can find left hand drive cars for sale in London. One place is the website "gumtree" and the website "lefthanddrive" on the internet.
No, most of the worlds cars have the steering wheel on the LEFT side of the car. Although there are some high-population countries that drive on the left such as India, Pakistan, Nigeria it is outweighed by countries such as China, USA and Brazil who drive on the right. It is ESTIMATED that a third of cars in the world have the steering wheel on the right.