DTC C1206 indicates the ABS control module detected an electrical integrity fault (open or short circuit) in the left rear wheel speed sensor circuit — Atto 3
DTC C1206 indicates the ABS control module detected an electrical integrity fault (open or short circuit) in the left rear wheel speed sensor circuit.
The sensor is typically a two-wire magnetic inductive or Hall effect type.
During normal operation, it sends the ABS module either an AC voltage signal that varies with wheel speed (magnetic inductive type, amplitude increases with speed, approximately 0.1V-5V) or a square-wave digital signal (Hall effect type).
The module triggers this fault when it detects infinite resistance in the sensor wiring (open circuit), a short to ground or power, or a continuously abnormal signal voltage (below 0.5V or above 4.5V) exceeding the set threshold (typically 2-5 seconds).
This fault causes a loss of the left rear wheel speed signal, forces the ABS, EBD, ESC, TCS, and Automatic Emergency Braking (AEB) systems into a degraded mode, and limits the energy recovery system.
In extreme cases, it causes uneven brake force distribution or vehicle skidding.
- 1Wheel speed sensor internal coil open or short circuit: Prolonged exposure to high temperatures and vibration can break the internal copper winding due to thermal fatigue or damage the insulation layer, causing an inter-turn short circuit. This causes the resistance value to fall outside the standard range (typically 1.0kΩ-2.0kΩ for BYD models).
- 2Wiring harness and connector faults: The chassis wiring harness may rub against the body bracket during vehicle vibration, damaging the outer insulation and causing an open circuit or intermittent poor contact. Aging connector seals allow water ingress, which oxidizes and corrodes the pins (especially common in high-humidity areas or after wading) and interrupts signal transmission.
- 3Abnormal sensor installation gap or damaged tone wheel (reluctor ring): Loose sensor mounting bolts cause an excessive air gap (standard gap is usually 0.3-1.0 mm). Iron filings or mud on the reluctor ring teeth, a deformed reluctor ring, or missing teeth reduce signal amplitude, causing the system to falsely detect a circuit fault.
- 4ABS control module internal circuit fault: A damaged sampling resistor or filter capacitor in the module's internal signal processing circuit, or a dry solder joint at the connector, prevents correct sensor signal identification and triggers a false open or short circuit fault.
- 5High-voltage electromagnetic interference (specific to new energy vehicles): Damaged shielding or poor grounding in the high-voltage system (drive motor, DC-DC) of BYD pure electric models can generate electromagnetic interference. This interference distorts the wheel speed sensor signal waveform and triggers a false fault.
- 1Initial inspection and verification: Use VDS or a dedicated diagnostic tool to read the full fault code stream and confirm if C1206 is an active fault. Check for other wheel speed sensor or high-voltage system fault codes. Raise the vehicle and visually inspect the left rear wheel speed sensor and wiring harness for physical damage, water ingress, or loose installation.
- 2Sensor resistance measurement: Disconnect the left rear wheel speed sensor connector. Use a multimeter to measure the resistance between the two sensor terminals. The standard value is 1.0 kΩ–2.0 kΩ (at 20°C). Infinite resistance indicates an open circuit. Resistance near 0 Ω indicates a short circuit. Replace the sensor if the resistance deviates significantly from the standard value. Measure the insulation resistance between the sensor and body ground. The resistance must exceed 10 MΩ; otherwise, a short to ground exists.
- 3Harness continuity and insulation test: Disconnect the ABS module connector and measure the harness continuity resistance between the sensor connector and the corresponding pins on the ABS module (usually pins 18# and 33#; refer to the vehicle wiring diagram). The resistance must be less than 1Ω. Measure the insulation resistance of this circuit to body ground and to the 12V power supply to confirm no short circuit exists. Check the connector pins for backed-out terminals, enlarged sockets, or green corrosion.
- 4Signal output verification (dynamic test): Reconnect the connector. Raise the vehicle. Manually rotate the left rear wheel and observe the signal output using an oscilloscope or a multimeter set to AC voltage. A magnetic inductive sensor outputs a sine-wave AC voltage that increases with rotational speed (>0.2 V). A Hall-effect sensor outputs a 0-5 V square-wave signal. If the signal is missing or weak, check the air gap between the sensor and the tone ring (standard: 0.3-1.0 mm). Clean foreign matter from the tone ring surface. Replace the sensor if necessary.
- 5ABS module power supply and ground check: Check the ABS module 12V constant power, ignition switch power, and ground circuits. Verify stable voltage (>11V). Verify internal module faults by substitution. After replacement, calibrate the lateral acceleration sensor and initialize the wheel speed sensor signals.
- 6Repair verification and road test: After repairing or replacing the faulty component, clear the fault code and perform a road test (maintain a vehicle speed above 40 km/h for more than 5 minutes). Confirm the fault code does not reappear, the ABS warning light turns off, the left rear wheel speed signal in the data stream matches the other wheel speeds, and the energy recovery function returns to normal.
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