Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - What is the snowflake on LaVida dashboard?

What is the snowflake on LaVida dashboard?

The instrument panel of LaVida Pacific Auto Network shows that the external temperature of the motor vehicle is too low, prompting the driver to pay attention to driving the vehicle. When the snowflake symbol lights up, it does not mean that the vehicle is out of order, reminding the driver that there may be frost on the road. Pay attention to avoid accidents when driving, which is the role of safety warning.

The snow inside the car shows 4 degrees, indicating that the temperature outside the car is too low, only 4 degrees Celsius. The display of 4-degree snow in the car mainly plays the role of reminding drivers to drive carefully, reminding drivers to pay attention to whether there are water, ice, snow, frost and other low-temperature weather conditions on the road surface, and pay attention to safety when driving at low temperatures. Generally, the bright snowflake light on the instrument is yellow at 0-4 degrees Celsius, and the bright snowflake light on the instrument panel is red below 0 degrees Celsius.

The reason for the snowflake label:

1. The outdoor temperature is too low, which means that the outdoor temperature measured by the outdoor temperature sensor is transmitted to the control system through the line when the car is driving in an outdoor temperature environment below 4 degrees Celsius, and the information collected by the control system is transmitted to the instrument, and the snowflake indicator light is lit. This is just a warning light and will not affect the normal use of the vehicle.

2. If the outdoor temperature sensor is damaged, it will collect the wrong outdoor temperature information, and then transmit it to the instrument through the line and control system and display it, and light the snowflake indicator. If the collected temperature information is lower than or higher than the actual temperature, the instrument will light the snowflake lamp, which is a fault lamp.

(Photo/Text/Photo: Pacific Auto Network Q&A called Beast)