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Reading your car dashboard: the meaning of 11 common symbols

Reading your car dashboard: the meaning of 11 common symbols

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There are three things school spits you out into adulthood without teaching you properly: emotional intelligence, financial literacy and how to read a car’s dashboard. Without help, all three can just look like an arbitrary jumble of signs and gestures and blinking lights.

We can’t teach you how to tell love from infatuation, but we can teach you what that ominous red hieroglyphic behind your steering wheel means, with a little help from the experts at Gines Auto Service in Kearns.

Is this thing on?

The first step to properly reading warning lights on dashboards is to make sure each light has the ability to turn on if it needs to. To do a bulb check, put your key in the ignition and turn it one notch before the engine cranks. All of the lights on the dash should come on. If your bulb is burned out, your vehicle won’t be able to tell you if there’s a problem. Needless to say, it’s better to prevent a problem than to address it when you’re broken down on the side of the highway.

Red means dead(ly serious)

Dash lights come in many shapes, sizes, and colors. The most important warning lights are red in color. Anything red is signaling to the driver that the vehicle shouldn’t be driven anymore until repaired.

Oil pressure light
Oil pressure light

The oil pressure light is designed to indicate that engine oil pressure has dropped to the point that major engine damage is occurring.

Low coolant light
Low coolant light

The red engine coolant temperature light indicates that the engine is overheating and if the engine is not shut off it will start to melt or warp internal engine parts.

Charging system light
Charging system light

The charge light is designed to let the driver know that the vehicle’s charging system is not working and only the electricity in the battery is keeping the car running. If ignored the battery will be drained and the engine will stop running.

Brake light
Brake light

The red brake light serves two purposes. It will come on if the parking brake is still applied or if the hydraulic system has lost pressure. The end result of ignoring either of these conditions is brake failure, which could lead to a collision.

Yellow’s a little more mellow

Vehicle manufacturers also use yellow or amber colored lights to warn you of problems that are less severe. Though very important to have addressed they are not as critical as the red warning lights. Many of the yellow lights are self-explanatory, but we’ll look at them for reference.

Check engine light
Check engine light

The check engine/service engine soon light is an indicator that the onboard computer has determined the vehicle is not running as efficiently as it should be and is putting out excessive harmful gasses. If the check engine light ever blinks, that means you need to shut off your vehicle or change the driving conditions before you further damage emissions-control devices called catalytic converters, which can be very expensive.

Tire pressure light
Tire pressure light

The tire pressure warning light lets drivers know when a tire’s air pressure has dropped by 20%, which will hurt your gas mileage and wear out your tire(s) faster than normal. If the tire pressure light blinks, that means the computer has lost communication with at least one of the sensors in the tires.

ABS light
ABS light

The ABS brake light shows if something is compromising the effectiveness of your anti-lock brakes.

Brake pad warning light
Brake pad warning light

Some cars also have a worn brake pad indicator light.

Stability system light
Stability system light

The stability control light will come on if there is a problem with the vehicle’s traction control or anti-skid system.

Headlamp out light
Headlamp out light

The lamp out light tells you when an exterior light isn’t working.

Loose gas cap light
Loose gas cap light

The loose gas cap indicator indicates that your gas cap is too tight. Just kidding. Too loose. Some cars don’t have a specific light for this and a loose cap will activate the check engine light.

Car manufacturers put many other lights on dashboards to inform the driver if certain accessories on the vehicle have been turned on or disabled, such as cruise control, stability control, fog lights, rear window defroster, hill descent, economy mode, sport mode, turn signal indicators, four-wheel drive indicator, and many more. Read the owners manual for a rundown of the indicator lights specific to your vehicle.

And, when in doubt, ask an ASE-certified auto mechanic like the fine folks at Gines to help you understand, diagnose and address any problems indicated by your dash.

Looking for a new or used car? Hundreds of cars are added every week on KSL Cars.

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