Daytime running lights on vehicles, which have been required to be
fitted on all new EU cars and small vans since early 2011 to
improve road safety, may be causing unintended confusion for other
drivers, according to research carried out by the RAC.
Designed to make cars more visible to other road users in
daylight conditions, daytime running lights automatically switch
on when the engine is running and switch off when the main
headlights are turned on. They are not designed to help drivers
see where they are going, but are there purely to enable other
road users to see the vehicle. This is why they are considerably
dimmer than dipped headlights.
But while all new vehicles have to have daytime running lights at
the front, it is not a requirement to fit them at the rear, yet
some manufacturers choose to do so. And, it is this issue that
appears to be causing confusion and frustration for road users in
dull driving conditions as many drivers don’t turn on their
dipped lights or sidelights, perhaps mistakenly thinking that
because they have daytime running lights on automatically at the
front the same applies to the rear lights.
An RAC Opinion Panel survey of 2,061 motorists* found that more
than six in 10 (62%) claimed to see other cars and vans driving
in dull overcast conditions without any rear lights on, while
they noted these vehicles did have lights on at the front.
Fifteen percent of those surveyed had not noticed this and nearly
a quarter (23%) were not sure.
RAC road safety spokesman Pete Williams said: “This is
potentially a very worrying finding as it implies that many
motorists are driving without any rear lights believing that
because they have running lights that switch on automatically at
the front, they are also on at the rear. Alternatively, and
arguably just as concerning, these drivers could simply have
decided the light conditions were not bad enough to merit turning
on their dipped lights or sidelights.”
Asked if they knew whether the car they drive most frequently had
daytime running lights nearly half (47%) stated that their
vehicle did not, 29% said theirs had them at the front only, 14%
said they had them at both the front and the rear, and somewhat
worryingly, 8% knew they did at the front but were unsure about
the rear.
Daytime running lights originate in the Nordic countries where
winter light levels are usually low, even in the day. Sweden was
the first country to require them, making them mandatory on 1
October 1977. This no doubt explains why in 1984 the Volvo 240
became the first vehicle on UK roads to have daytime running
lights.
Studies into the effectiveness of daytime running lights
regarding road safety have had varying results. An American study from
2008 put the figure at a modest 0.3 per cent,
however when the EU investigated
the issue in 2003 it suggested there was a likely
reduction in multi-party collisions of between 5% and 15%.
While EU law required all cars and small vans produced since 2011
to have daytime running lights, trucks and buses were not
included in legislation until August 2012. Vehicles produced
before these days do not have to be retrofitted.
Pete Williams added: “While daytime running lights are clearly
bringing a very valuable safety benefit to the UK’s roads, it
would be good for every driver to take just a few minutes to make
sure they know whether the vehicles they drive have them or not.
And if they do, then check to see if they have them at the rear
as well as the front. That way those that don’t have them at the
back will be far more likely in poor daylight visibility to
switch on their dipped lights to make their vehicle more easily
seen from behind.
“We strongly urge everyone to carry out this check as those few
minutes could make an important road safety difference.”
Read the RAC’s article on daytime running
lights here.
Ends
Notes to Editors
* Survey carried out with 2,061 members of the RAC Opinion Panel