DTC U1005 indicates the vehicle SRS (Supplemental Restraint System/airbag system) control module detects a short circuit between its CAN communication bus (including CAN-H and/or CAN-L lines) and the vehicle positive power supply (12V battery voltage or high-voltage system power supply) — Atto 3
DTC U1005 indicates the vehicle SRS (Supplemental Restraint System/airbag system) control module detects a short circuit between its CAN communication bus (including CAN-H and/or CAN-L lines) and the vehicle positive power supply (12V battery voltage or high-voltage system power supply).
Normally, the CAN bus voltage to ground measures approximately 2.5V (recessive state) and 3.5V/1.5V (dominant state).
A short to power pulls the CAN bus voltage up to 12V, completely interrupting communication between the SRS system and the vehicle Powertrain CAN or Body CAN.
Because safety-critical subsystems (airbag system, seat belt pretensioners, crash sensors, and seat occupancy detection) rely on the CAN bus for data exchange and trigger command transmission, this fault prevents the airbag system from deploying normally during a collision.
This constitutes a Level 1 severe fault affecting occupant life safety.
- 1Worn or cracked SRS control module wiring harness insulation causes the CAN-H or CAN-L wire to short directly to a power wire (constant power or ignition power). This commonly occurs under the steering column, near the seat slide rails, or at bends in the sill wiring harness.
- 2Vehicle wading, a blocked sunroof drain hose, or washing the interior with a high-pressure washer allows water to enter the SRS control module connector (usually located in the lower centre console or under the centre armrest box), causing an electrolytic short circuit between the pins.
- 3Improperly securing the wiring harness during collision repairs or unauthorized aftermarket installations (such as dash cams, seat heaters, or audio systems) allows the instrument panel bracket, seat mounting bolts, or metal trim panel edges to cut the harness, causing a short circuit to the vehicle power supply.
- 4Damaged internal CAN transceiver integrated circuit in the SRS control module. An internal short circuit pulls the CAN line voltage high. Module overheating usually accompanies this fault.
- 5Instrument panel or floor wiring harness insulation cracked due to long-term aging. On rough roads, the harness contacts the power distribution box or fuse box metal bracket, causing a short circuit.
- 1Use the BYD dedicated diagnostic tool (VDS2000/3000) to read all fault codes and freeze frame data. Confirm U1005 is a current fault (Active) that will not clear, and check for accompanying B1xxx series SRS sensor faults or U01xx communication faults.
- 2Perform the high-voltage power-down procedure (for new energy vehicles) or disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal. Wait 3 minutes for capacitor discharge, then disconnect the SRS control module connector (usually located under the center console or center tunnel). Use a multimeter to measure the resistance from connector terminals CAN-H (orange/black) and CAN-L (orange/brown) to the battery positive terminal. Normal resistance is greater than 1 MΩ. A resistance below 10 kΩ confirms a short circuit.
- 3If resistance is abnormal, use the sectional isolation method: disconnect the airbag coil (clock spring) connector, the seatbelt pretensioner connector under the seat, and the side impact sensor connector. Measure each section to isolate the short circuit. Focus inspection on the wiring harness bends below the steering column and the wiring harness protective sleeve near the seat slide rail.
- 4Check the SRS control module connector for backed-out pins, corrosion, burn marks, or signs of water ingress. Clean with electrical contact cleaner and blow dry. Replace the connector or repair the pins if necessary.
- 5If the wiring harness appears normal and sectional measurements show no short circuits, reconnect the battery with the SRS module disconnected. Measure the voltage between the CAN wires at the harness connector and ground. A 12V reading indicates a short circuit in the internal CAN transceiver of the SRS control module. Replace the SRS control module and perform coding configuration.
- 6After repairing the short circuit, wrap the damaged area with double-wall heat-shrink tubing or insulating tape. Re-secure the wiring harness, maintaining at least a 20mm clearance from metal edges. Restore all connections, clear the fault code, and perform the SRS system self-check cycle (cycle the ignition switch ON-OFF three times) to confirm the fault does not recur.
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