DashboardSymbols.com
Earlier this year, we noted in a post that DashboardSymbols.com was then hosting nearly 1,000 symbols and indicators. We have since run past the 1,000 barrier rather handily.
This got us thinking about how this impacts our visitors. How is anyone supposed to find anything in what has become a quagmire? One solution, implemented several years ago, is pages dedicated to individual manufacturers, and it is how we recommend searching the site. The other is by color.
Well, we are combining the two.
Our main page, which hosts all the images that are not text, remains a difficult mess to get through and is organized by technology categories. However, this assumes a driver even knows what tech category the mystery light he or she is searching for belongs to! This is a massive oversite on our part.
We recently updated our Infiniti page, which required but a single change to a page that is already one of the simplest on the site. That said, it still holds over 80 entries.
The result is a commitment to re-ordering everything on the site by color, and the Infiniti page is the first to reflect this. Others will follow.
It will be a long slog, as there are about 50 pages that will need the work. But the work will get done, and we sincerely hope that it simplifies your experience.
Cars are changing, and among those changes is the growing number of symbols and indicators that will invariably show up on your dashboard or instrument panel. Every year, new features are added to vehicles, each of which is accompanied by a new symbol or symbols and likely a new acronym.
At DashboardSymbols.com, our aim is to help you understand what is happening to your vehicle at the first sign of trouble – a new warning light illuminated on your instrument panel. Its all here on this website. Our first intention is to bring the latest technologies down to earth and understandable for everyday drivers.
You can see the Infiniti page here.
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Remember that only proper service and repair procedures will ensure the safe and reliable operation of your car. In addition, proper safety procedures and precautions, such as the use of safety goggles, the right tools and the equipment should be followed at all times to eliminate the possibility of personal injury or improper service which could damage the vehicle or compromise its safety.
These posts are for information sharing purposes only, and should not be used in lieu of an OEM service manual or factory authorized service procedure. We are not in the auto repair business nor do we publish automotive service manuals. Nothing we include on these pages and posts has been reviewed, approved or authorized by any vehicle manufacturer.
Technology is always changing and what is current and accurate today may be literally out-of-date and inaccurate tomorrow. And when it comes to the current state of flux in the auto industry, nothing is more true.
The author has 25 years of automotive experience and has assembled the most extensive collection of symbols and warning lights anywhere (over 1,000!) and can help you open and start any keyless start car with a dead key fob battery. BA, St. Joseph’s College, ME: MS, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, NY
Total page views at DashboardSymbols.com surpassed 46 million in Oct. 2024
Total page views
In October of 2024, DashboardSymbols.com saw its total page views pass the 46 million mark. The site is seen by thousands of drivers every day.
Since our founding in 2010, over 31.5 million visitors have accessed over 64.3 million pages and videos. And each one of those visitors is looking for help for some kind of automotive problem.
Its been tough the last 14 months or so. Changes in the Google algorithm has cost us some 75% of what was once steadily growing traffic. And while we continue to struggle to find the right formula to turn that situation around, we persist in our quest to host the information so desperately needed by drivers of modern vehicles.
The Video Side
We began creating videos, posted here and on our YouTube channel, early in 2015, principally to help drivers with dead key fobs. Along with some additional technology, repair and accessory videos, they are viewed some 100,000 times a month, and now total over 18.3 million views. There are 259 videos available.
Cars are changing, and among those changes is the growing number of symbols and indicators that will invariably show up on your dashboard or instrument panel. Every year, new features are added to vehicles, each of which is accompanied by a new symbol or symbols and likely a new acronym.
At DashboardSymbols.com, our aim is to help you understand what is happening to your vehicle at the first sign of trouble – a new warning light illuminated on your instrument panel. Its all here on this website. Our first intention is to bring the latest technologies down to earth and understandable for everyday drivers.
——————————————————————-
Remember that only proper service and repair procedures will ensure the safe and reliable operation of your car. In addition, proper safety procedures and precautions, such as the use of safety goggles, the right tools and the equipment should be followed at all times to eliminate the possibility of personal injury or improper service which could damage the vehicle or compromise its safety.
These posts are for information sharing purposes only, and should not be used in lieu of an OEM service manual or factory authorized service procedure. We are not in the auto repair business nor do we publish automotive service manuals. Nothing we include on these pages and posts has been reviewed, approved or authorized by any vehicle manufacturer.
Technology is always changing and what is current and accurate today may be literally out-of-date and inaccurate tomorrow. And when it comes to the current state of flux in the auto industry, nothing is more true.
The author has 25 years of automotive experience and has assembled the most extensive collection of symbols and warning lights anywhere (over 1,000!) and can help you open and start any keyless start car with a dead key fob battery. BA, St. Joseph’s College, ME: MS, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, NY