DTC C007500 indicates an electrical fault or short circuit in Master Cylinder Position Sensor A within the IPB (Intelligent Power Brake) system — Atto 8
DTC C007500 indicates an electrical fault or short circuit in Master Cylinder Position Sensor A within the IPB (Intelligent Power Brake) system.
This sensor typically uses a Hall-effect or inductive principle and mounts near the brake master cylinder.
It monitors master cylinder piston travel in real time, converting the driver's mechanical braking intent into an electrical signal (typically a 0.5-4.5V analog voltage) and transmitting it to the IPB ECU.
The ECU uses this signal to calculate the required brake fluid pressure and controls the motor to build hydraulic pressure.
The ECU sets this DTC when it detects the sensor signal voltage continuously exceeding the valid range (short to power >4.8V or short to ground <0.2V), or an abnormal logical relationship between the signal and pedal travel.
Setting this DTC causes the IPB system to enter a degraded mode, disable brake energy recovery, retain only basic hydraulic braking, and illuminate the ABS/ESC warning light.
- 1Sensor wiring harness worn or crushed, causing a short to power or ground: The IPB assembly is located near the engine compartment firewall. Vibration may cause the wiring harness to rub against sharp body edges, or front compartment repairs may crush the harness, damaging the insulation.
- 2Connector water ingress or oxidative corrosion: During car washing, wading, or in damp environments, poor sealing of the sensor connector (usually located in the middle of the IPB assembly) causes pin oxidation or electrolytic corrosion, resulting in abnormal resistance or a short circuit.
- 3Internal fault in the master cylinder position sensor: Aging of the internal Hall element, cold solder joints, or a coil short circuit causes an abnormal output signal. This fault frequently occurs in high-temperature environments or high-mileage vehicles (>80,000 km).
- 4IPB control module internal signal processing circuit fault: Damage to the ECU internal ADC sampling circuit or signal conditioning chip causes the ECU to misjudge a normal sensor signal as faulty or fail to provide a stable 5V reference voltage to the sensor.
- 5Mechanical offset at the sensor mounting position: After IPB assembly removal and installation, misalignment between the sensor and the master cylinder piston causes the air gap to exceed the design range. The system detects the resulting abnormal signal amplitude as a short circuit.
- 1Freeze frame analysis: Use a dedicated BYD diagnostic tool (VDS or EDS) to read the fault code freeze frame data. Record the vehicle speed, brake pedal status, battery SOC, and IPB motor status at the time of the fault. Determine whether the fault is intermittent during driving or continuous while stationary.
- 2Visual and wiring harness inspection: Raise the vehicle and inspect the IPB assembly (located at the firewall above the brake pedal) for impact deformation or water marks. Follow the sensor wiring harness (usually exiting from the top of the IPB) and inspect for wear, damaged insulation, or interference with the vehicle body. Closely inspect the rubber grommet at the firewall pass-through.
- 3Connector inspection: Disconnect the sensor connector on the IPB assembly (usually features a waterproof locking tab). Check the pins for green oxidation, backed-out terminals, or enlarged terminal holes. Measure the voltage between the connector power supply terminal (usually Pin1 or Pin3; refer to the vehicle wiring diagram) and ground. Confirm the voltage is 5V±0.25V. If the voltage is abnormal, check the IPB ECU power supply.
- 4Signal circuit measurement: Use an oscilloscope or multimeter to measure the sensor signal wire voltage. When depressing the brake pedal, the voltage must change smoothly (0.5V-4.5V). If the voltage jumps, spikes, or remains fixed high/low, disconnect the sensor connector and measure the harness-side insulation resistance to ground and power. Resistance must be >10MΩ.
- 5Sensor body test: If the wiring is normal, remove the master cylinder position sensor (some models require replacing the entire IPB assembly). Place a magnet near the sensing surface and verify the output voltage changes with magnetic field strength. If the voltage remains constant, the sensor has internal damage.
- 6IPB assembly replacement and calibration: If the sensor cannot be replaced separately or an internal ECU fault exists, replace the IPB intelligent power brake assembly. After replacement, use the diagnostic tool to perform the 'IPB Bleeding' and 'Pedal Position Sensor Calibration' procedures. Otherwise, the fault light remains illuminated and brake pedal travel becomes abnormal.
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