DTC B1667-00 indicates the airbag control unit (SRS ECU) detects a short to body ground in the signal circuit of the left side impact sensor (typically installed inside the left B-pillar reinforcement panel) — Atto 8
DTC B1667-00 indicates the airbag control unit (SRS ECU) detects a short to body ground in the signal circuit of the left side impact sensor (typically installed inside the left B-pillar reinforcement panel).
This sensor is typically a MEMS capacitive or piezoelectric accelerometer.
During normal operation, it returns a bias resistance of approximately 2.1-2.9 kΩ and a signal voltage of approximately 2.5 V to the ECU.
When wiring harness insulation breaks, water enters the connector, or the sensor shorts internally, the ECU detects a continuous voltage signal below 0.5 V (short-to-ground threshold) and triggers this DTC.
This fault disables the trigger threshold determination for the left side airbag and curtain airbag.
During a side collision, the airbags may fail to deploy promptly, or signal interference during normal driving may cause unintended deployment.
This is a highest-level safety fault.
- 1Damage to the sensor wiring harness insulation causing a short to ground: Common causes include underbody scraping, loose wiring harness retaining clips causing the harness to rub against metal body edges, or crushing the wiring harness during sill trim panel removal and installation.
- 2Connector water ingress and corrosion: Poor sealing in the left B-pillar area, a blocked sunroof drain tube causing leaks, or direct high-pressure washing of the B-pillar causes connector terminal oxidation, resulting in a short to ground.
- 3Internal sensor body damage: Severe vibration (from improper removal and installation, or accidents) causes electrical breakdown of the internal piezoelectric element or circuit board, or electronic components age and fail after the sensor exceeds its 5-year service life.
- 4Installation defects: deformed sensor mounting bracket (not straightened after accident repair), excessive tightening torque cracking the housing, or a missing mounting spacer allowing the sensor housing to directly contact the vehicle body metal and cause a short circuit.
- 5Internal SRS ECU fault: Damage to the ECU internal sampling circuit causes a false short-to-ground reading. Rule out by substituting a known good unit (occurrence rate approx. 5-10%).
- 1Safety preparation: Wear insulated gloves, disconnect the 12V low-voltage battery negative terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS system capacitor (for new energy vehicle high-voltage systems, confirm the READY light is off).
- 2Fault confirmation: Use a BYD dedicated diagnostic tool (VDS or ED400) to read SRS system fault codes, verify B1667-00 is the current fault code, and record freeze frame data (ambient temperature, voltage value).
- 3Physical inspection: Remove the left B-pillar lower trim panel and sill trim panel. Visually inspect the wiring harness corrugated conduit for damage and connector KG10 (or K05, depending on vehicle model) for signs of water ingress (green copper corrosion, white crystalline deposits).
- 4Circuit isolation check: Disconnect the left side impact sensor connector. Use a multimeter to measure the resistance between the wiring harness side terminal (KG10-12 or corresponding pin) and body ground. Normal resistance is >1MΩ. If the resistance is <1Ω, this confirms a short to ground. Inspect the wiring along the circuit to locate the damage.
- 5Sensor component inspection: Measure the resistance between the sensor-side terminals. The standard value is 2.1-2.9kΩ (refer to the specific vehicle repair manual). If the resistance is near 0Ω or infinite, replace the sensor.
- 6Connector repair: If terminals are oxidized, clean them with electrical contact cleaner and apply conductive grease. If the locking tab is damaged or a terminal backs out, replace the entire connector assembly and verify the waterproof sealing ring is intact.
- 7Wiring harness repair: Wrap the damaged wiring harness with double-layer heat-shrink tubing, adjust the harness routing to avoid contact with sharp metal edges, and re-secure the clips to ensure no stress.
- 8Replace the sensor (if required): Use genuine parts (such as the BYD-3636010 series). Verify the mounting surface is flat and undeformed. Tighten to the standard torque of 8N·m (never use an impact wrench). Observe the sensor installation direction mark (usually the 'UP' arrow points to the roof or 'F' points to the front of the vehicle).
- 9System reset: Reconnect the battery, turn the ignition ON without starting the vehicle, and check if the SRS warning light turns off after 6 seconds. Use the diagnostic tool to clear the fault code. Perform 'SRS system self-learning' or 'crash sensor zero-point calibration' (required on some models).
- 10Verification test: Perform a road test for at least 30 minutes, including bumpy roads. Use a diagnostic tool to read the data stream and confirm the left crash sensor signal voltage is within 2.3-2.7V without fluctuation.
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