DTC B165E11 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control unit detects an abnormally low-resistance path (typically <1Ω) between the right front impact sensor signal or power circuit and body ground, constituting a short to ground — Atto 8
DTC B165E11 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control unit detects an abnormally low-resistance path (typically <1Ω) between the right front impact sensor signal or power circuit and body ground, constituting a short to ground.
In BYD E2/E3/Qin EV architectures, this sensor utilizes a bipolar MEMS accelerometer and communicates with the SRS ECU via a hardwire or LIN bus connection.
A short to ground causes the ECU to continuously receive a 0V reference signal, preventing it from distinguishing between "no collision" and "circuit fault" states.
Per ISO 26262 functional safety requirements, the system enters Fail-Safe mode: it immediately illuminates the airbag fault warning lamp and disables right front airbag and side curtain airbag deployment to prevent unintended triggering or failure to deploy.
This represents a severe ASIL-D fault.
- 1Internal short circuit in the sensor: Overvoltage, static electricity, or aging causes a breakdown between the power supply pin and ground within the right front crash sensor integrated circuit (ASIC). This commonly occurs after vehicle wading or a battery system insulation fault.
- 2Harness mechanical damage: Front bumper removal and installation, accident repairs, or overly tight fender liner retaining clips abrade the sensor harness insulation (usually located on the outside of the right front side member), causing the copper core to directly contact the vehicle body metal frame.
- 3Connector water ingress and corrosion: An aged sealing ring on the right front bumper wiring harness connector (usually located behind the headlamp or on the right side of the radiator support) allows water to accumulate inside after car washing or wading, causing an electrolytic short to ground between the pins.
- 4SRS ECU internal monitoring circuit fault: An abnormal ground reference point in the control unit A/D sampling circuit causes the ECU to misidentify normal sensors as short circuits (rule out using the cross-check method).
- 5Interference from modifications or external equipment: Tapping power for unauthorized aftermarket front radars, dash cams, etc., accidentally damages the SRS wiring harness, or using unshielded wiring introduces a ground loop.
- 1Safe power-down and discharge: Switch off the ignition, disconnect the low-voltage battery negative terminal, wait at least 90 seconds (to fully discharge the SRS energy storage capacitor), and wear an anti-static wrist strap.
- 2Initial visual inspection: Remove the right front bumper cover. Inspect the right front crash sensor (located at the front of the right front longitudinal beam or below the headlamp bracket) for physical damage or cracks. Inspect the wiring harness corrugated conduit for wear or crush marks. Inspect the connector for looseness or signs of water ingress (white powder or verdigris).
- 3Static measurement verification: Disconnect the sensor connector. Use a multimeter to measure the resistance between the harness-side signal pin (usually the yellow/green wire) and body ground. Normal value: >10MΩ (open circuit). A reading <5Ω confirms a short to ground. Simultaneously measure the voltage between the power supply pin (usually the orange wire) and ground to verify no abnormal voltage exists.
- 4Sensor body test: Measure the resistance between the pins of the removed crash sensor. Normal resistance is 2.0-4.0 kΩ (refer to the workshop manual for standard values). Replace the sensor if the measured resistance is <100 Ω or if any pin has continuity with the sensor housing.
- 5Section-by-section wiring harness inspection: If the sensor is normal, strip back the wiring harness sheath in sections from the sensor toward the SRS ECU (usually located under the center console or behind the armrest box). Inspect the harness closely at the fender liner bend and near the front longitudinal beam weld points. Locate any damaged insulation and repair it using heat-shrink tubing or tape.
- 6ECU cross-check: Swap the left and right front crash sensors. If the fault code follows the sensor to the left side (changes to B165D11), the sensor is faulty. If the fault code remains on the right side, check the wiring harness or ECU.
- 7Repair and replacement: Replace the faulty sensor (match the part number to the vehicle model, e.g., E2-53420XXX), or repair the wiring harness, wrap it with waterproof tape, and verify the connector sealing ring is intact.
- 8System reset and verification: Reconnect the power supply. Use the VDS2000 or BYD dedicated diagnostic tool to clear the fault codes. Execute the 'SRS system self-check' (approximately 30 seconds). Verify B165E11 does not return. Read the right front crash sensor data stream. Lightly tap the longitudinal beam near the sensor and observe the acceleration value changes (should fluctuate within the 0-50mV range). Verify the system operates normally.
E2 SRS light on after water ingress: right front impact sensor connector shorted due to water entry
Intermittent B165E11 on Qin EV after accident repair: bumper clip pinched wiring harness
E3 radar modification caused SRS system false alarm: wire splicing caused short circuit
Sensor-internal ASIC breakdown: hard short caused by aging