DTC B166F indicates a loss of communication between the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) ECU and the Right Side Impact Sensor (RSIS) — Atto 3
DTC B166F indicates a loss of communication between the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) ECU and the Right Side Impact Sensor (RSIS).
This sensor typically mounts below the B-pillar on the right front door frame or the lower section of the right centre pillar to detect side-impact acceleration on the right side of the vehicle.
The SRS ECU sets this fault code if it fails to receive a signal from the sensor within a predetermined time, or detects circuit resistance outside the normal range (open/short circuit).
This fault may prevent the right side airbag and right curtain airbag from deploying correctly during a side impact, severely compromising occupant side-impact protection.
It does not affect frontal impact protection.
- 1Poor connector contact: Right crash sensor connector K05(B) and body wiring harness connector KG10 are not fully locked, the retaining clip is damaged, or the terminals are oxidized, interrupting signal transmission.
- 2Wiring harness open circuit or wear: Long-term vibration at the wiring harness retaining clip inside the B-pillar trim panel damages the insulation and partially breaks the wire, or pinching the harness during repairs causes an intermittent open circuit.
- 3Sensor body damaged: Collision impact, water ingress, or electrical overload damaged the sensor's internal piezoelectric accelerometer element or signal processing circuit, causing an open circuit.
- 4Incorrect installation: Reinstalling the sensor in the wrong orientation after removal (arrow must point toward the front of the vehicle), insufficient fixing bolt torque (standard: 8-10 N·m), or a deformed mounting surface causing poor contact between the sensor and the vehicle body.
- 5SRS ECU terminal fault: ECU-side connector KG10 terminal 20 (W/L wire) or 45 (W/G wire) backed out or corroded, causing poor contact with the wiring harness.
- 1Safety preparation: Turn the power mode to OFF, disconnect the negative battery cable, and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Locate component: Remove the right B-pillar lower trim panel, locate the right side impact sensor (usually marked RSIS or SIS-R), and verify the connection status of connector K05(B).
- 3Visual inspection: Check if the connector is fully seated and if the locking tab is broken; inspect the wiring harness at the B-pillar trim clip for wear, cuts, or pinch marks.
- 4Circuit continuity test: Use a multimeter to measure the resistance from body harness side KG10-20 (white/blue wire) to sensor side K05(B)-2, and from KG10-45 (white/green wire) to K05(B)-1. Normal resistance is <1Ω. Measure the resistance to ground; it must be >10MΩ (to rule out a short circuit).
- 5Sensor body inspection: Disconnect the connector and measure the resistance between the two sensor terminals. The standard resistance is 2-3kΩ (at 24±5°C). If the resistance is infinite or zero, replace the sensor.
- 6Cross-check: Swap the left and right side impact sensors. If the fault code moves to the left side (B166A), the sensor is faulty. If the fault remains, inspect the wiring.
- 7Repair procedure: When repairing the wiring harness, solder using 0.5 mm² twisted shielded wire and insulate with heat-shrink tubing. For loose connectors, repair the retaining clip or apply conductive paste. For damaged sensors, install a new part with the arrow facing forward, and tighten to the specified torque of 8-10 N·m.
- 8Verification test: Connect the battery. Set the power to the ON position. Clear the fault code using the diagnostic tool. Wait 20 seconds for the system self-check. Confirm the SRS warning light turns off. Read the data stream to confirm the right-side sensor acceleration signal is normal.
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