In BYD new energy vehicles, DTC B169F indicates an ESP (Electronic Stability Program) control unit communication fault, not an SRS airbag fault (early documentation may contain classification errors) — Atto 8
In BYD new energy vehicles, DTC B169F indicates an ESP (Electronic Stability Program) control unit communication fault, not an SRS airbag fault (early documentation may contain classification errors).
This fault code indicates the powertrain CAN or chassis CAN bus fails to receive a valid data frame from the ESP control module (integrated into the vehicle stability system, typically located on the left side of the engine compartment or inside the left front wheel arch), or the received signal fails verification.
This disables the Electronic Stability Program, traction control, anti-lock braking system (ABS), and advanced driver assistance functions relying on ESP signals (such as adaptive cruise control and lane keeping).
Root causes include a physical-layer CAN bus communication interruption, abnormal terminating resistance, a control unit power supply/ground fault, or a software version mismatch.
- 1Poor contact, oxidation, or water ingress at the ESP control module wiring harness connector (the module mounting location exposes it to mud splash and car wash water intrusion, causing terminal corrosion).
- 2CAN bus circuit fault (CAN-H or CAN-L short or open circuit, damaged twisted-pair spacing, or terminating resistance deviating from the standard value of 60Ω)
- 3Abnormal power supply or ground to the ESP control unit (blown fuse, poor relay contact, or loose ground point causing voltage drop)
- 4Internal control unit hardware damage (overvoltage, short circuit, or electrostatic breakdown of the CAN transceiver chip causing communication interruption)
- 5Software version mismatch or flashing failure (interrupted OTA upgrade, ESP module software incompatible with VCU/BCM).
- 1Use the BYD dedicated diagnostic tool VDS2000/VDS3000 to read all fault codes and freeze frame data. Check for accompanying related fault codes such as U010104 (lost communication with ESP) or U030198 (software version mismatch).
- 2Check the power supply voltage (standard 12V±0.5V) and ground resistance (less than 1Ω) of the ESP control module (part number usually in the BYD-3636100 series) to confirm the power and ground circuits are normal.
- 3Measure the CAN bus physical layer parameters: CAN-H to ground voltage 2.5-2.7 V, CAN-L to ground voltage 2.3-2.5 V, and differential voltage approximately 0.2 V. Disconnect power and measure the terminal resistance. The resistance must be 55-65 Ω (if abnormal, check for a damaged 120 Ω terminal resistor or a wiring short circuit).
- 4Check the ESP module wiring harness connector sealing, especially at the mounting position inside the left front wheel arch. Inspect for water stains, verdigris, or loose pins. Clean with precision electrical contact cleaner and apply conductive paste/waterproof silicone grease.
- 5Inspect along the CAN wiring harness routing for crushing, damage, or damaged insulation caused by rubbing against metal body components. Focus on accident repair areas and wiring harness retaining clips.
- 6Perform software diagnostics: Verify the ESP control unit software version matches the vehicle configuration. Attempt to reflash the latest software version (ensure vehicle battery level is >50% and diagnostic tool connection is stable).
- 7If all above checks are normal, replace the ESP control module assembly. After replacement, perform the steering angle sensor calibration (steering wheel centering and left/right end-stop position learning), wheel speed sensor signal check, and ESP system self-learning procedure.
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