Warning ahead! 98 per cent of drivers cannot understand their dashboard
lights (but do YOU know what these symbols mean?)

   - Nine in 10 failed to recognise the sign for a faulty catalytic
   converter
   - Just 12 of the symbols were common across all car models
   - A Mercedes-Benz E Class has the most symbols with 41 compared to a
   Nissan Micra which has 21

By RAY 
MASSEY<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/search.html?s=&authornamef=Ray+Massey>
PUBLISHED: 11:22 GMT, 31 July 2013 | UPDATED: 23:50 GMT, 31 July 2013
Britain’s motorists are becoming a nation of ‘dashboard dunces’ baffled by
the increasing array of warning lights in their cars, new research has
revealed.
More than nine in ten people failed to recognise one particular warning.
The study identified 99 separate dashboard light warnings in 15 of the UK’s
most popular cars ranging from the humble Nissan hatchback to Mercedes-Benz
executive saloons.
[image: Dashboard]
Yet just 12 of the symbol designs were common across all models.
Breakdown firm Britannia Rescue, which commissioned the report, also
conducted a survey of 2,018 drivers that revealed more than half of drivers
(52 per cent) can correctly identify all 16 of the most common symbols.



The company said the number of warnings on dashboards varied dramatically
from one make to another and highlighted the Mercedes-Benz E Class for
having 41 compared to 21 in a Nissan Micra, BMW 3 Series and Volvo S40.
The Britannia Rescue poll found that a quarter of motorists have had one or
more warning symbols light up while driving in the past 12 months – most
commonly the engine, oil or battery lights.
[image: The Mercedes-Benz E Class (pictured) had the most symbols with 41
compared to 21 in the Nissan Micra]
The Mercedes-Benz E Class (pictured) had the most symbols with 41 compared
to 21 in the Nissan Micra

The most baffling light is for a faulty catalytic converter which was
incorrectly identified by 95 per cent of drivers.
Next for confusion was the air conditioning light which 86 per cent got
wrong, followed by a tyre pressure warning that flummoxed 71 per cent.
Nearly half (48 per cent) do not even recognise the brake warning light and
more than a third (35 per cent) cannot understand an airbag alert, with
almost as many (27 per cent) mistaking it for a seat-belt warning.
Dashboard lights commonly inform drivers about problems like poor battery
condition, low oil pressure and high engine temperature.
But many cars now have lights for service interval indicators and seatbelt
reminders along with malfunctions ranging from faulty anti-skid stability
control to blocked air and fuel filters, defective diesel filters or fuel
contaminated by water.
A Britannia Rescue spokesman said:’Cars have become so complex that the
majority of drivers don’t understand what all of the most common warning or
information lights on a car dashboard mean.
‘As in-car technology becomes more advanced there are now more and more
in-car gadgets with symbols that support everything from the car’s sat-nav
system to its heating and cooling options.

[image: Models with the most messages]



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