This DTC indicates an abnormally low-resistance connection (short circuit) between the signal circuit of the left rear side impact sensor (SIS) in the Supplemental Restraint System (SRS) and the vehicle body ground (GND) — Atto 8
This DTC indicates an abnormally low-resistance connection (short circuit) between the signal circuit of the left rear side impact sensor (SIS) in the Supplemental Restraint System (SRS) and the vehicle body ground (GND).
Under normal operating conditions, the impact sensor sends a specific voltage signal (typically a PWM or resistor divider signal) to the SRS control unit (ACU) to indicate its status.
When a short to ground occurs, the ACU detects the circuit voltage remaining at or near 0V and a resistance well below the standard range (typically <1Ω), identifying a short-to-ground fault.
This fault causes the SRS to enter fail-safe mode.
The system illuminates the airbag fault warning lamp and disables the left rear side airbag and curtain airbag deployment functions to prevent accidental deployment caused by the short circuit.
In a severe side-impact collision, the affected airbags may fail to deploy normally, posing a major safety hazard.
- 1Worn or damaged left rear crash sensor wiring harness insulation causes the wire to short to vehicle body metal (commonly found inside the sill trim panel where the harness passes sharp edges or retaining clips).
- 2Seal failure of internal electronic components in the crash sensor body allows moisture intrusion, causing a printed circuit board (PCB) short to ground.
- 3Water ingress, corrosion, or bent pins in the sensor connector (usually located near the C-pillar or rear seat) cause a short circuit between the signal and ground terminals.
- 4A rear-end collision damaged the wiring harness but did not completely sever it. Improper insulation during repair caused a hidden short to ground.
- 5Internal fault in the SRS control unit (ACU) signal processing circuit causing incorrect interpretation of sensor signals (less common; confirm only after ruling out wiring harness faults)
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS system capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Visual inspection: Remove the left rear door sill trim and lower C-pillar trim. Inspect the crash sensor (usually located behind the C-pillar interior trim panel or near the left rear longitudinal beam) and wiring harness for obvious damage, crushing, or water ingress.
- 3Connector inspection: Disconnect the left rear crash sensor connector and check the terminals for corrosion, deformation, or water ingress. Measure the resistance to ground at the signal pin on the harness side of the connector. The resistance must be greater than 10kΩ (infinite). If the resistance is too low, the wiring harness is shorted to ground.
- 4Harness circuit inspection: Use a multimeter to measure harness continuity and ground insulation between the sensor and the ACU. Inspect the insulation integrity where the harness passes through body sheet metal holes and retaining clips.
- 5Sensor inspection: Measure the resistance between the collision sensor body signal terminal and the ground terminal (refer to the workshop manual for standard values; normally within a specific range, close to 0Ω if shorted). Replace the sensor if abnormal.
- 6Repair or replace: Repair the damaged wiring harness (use heat shrink tubing or replace the harness section) or replace the left rear crash sensor assembly. Verify the installation torque meets the standard (typically 8-10 N·m).
- 7System reset: Reconnect the battery, use the VDS2000/3000 diagnostic tool to clear the fault code, and perform an SRS system self-check. Confirm B16E011 does not return and the instrument cluster airbag warning light turns off.
Water ingress into the left rear impact sensor connector caused a short to ground on the BYD Qin EV.
Damaged wiring harness insulation after accident repair caused an intermittent short circuit in a BYD E2.
BYD E3 left rear collision sensor internal PCB short circuit fault