DTC C051600 indicates the IPB (Intelligent Integrated Braking System) detects an intermittent abnormality or insufficient plausibility in the right rear wheel speed sensor signal — Atto 8
DTC C051600 indicates the IPB (Intelligent Integrated Braking System) detects an intermittent abnormality or insufficient plausibility in the right rear wheel speed sensor signal.
Unlike a direct open or short circuit fault, 'indirect uncertainty' means the sensor still returns a signal, but under specific operating conditions (such as a specific vehicle speed range, steering maneuver, or road input), the signal spikes, drifts, or illogically contrasts with the other wheel signals.
The IPB system algorithm compares the four-wheel speed differential, longitudinal acceleration, and yaw rate signals.
The system triggers this fault when the right rear wheel speed signal duration or amplitude exceeds the plausible confidence interval but has not yet reached the hard fault threshold.
This condition typically indicates dynamic sensor-to-tone ring gap variation, electromagnetic signal interference, or an intermittent voltage drop in the sensor power supply or ground, which can cause ABS/ESC function degradation or false activation.
- 1Ferromagnetic debris or brake dust accumulated on the right rear wheel speed sensor head changes the effective magnetic permeability of the air gap, causing unstable signal amplitude.
- 2Right rear wheel hub bearing wear causes axial/radial play to exceed tolerance, dynamically changing the relative position between the sensor and tone ring (common on vehicles with >50,000 km).
- 3Repeated bending of the sensor wiring harness in the body-to-rear-wheel transition area (such as inside the sill trim panel or near the rear suspension) causes hidden internal wire breaks and intermittently increases contact resistance.
- 4Scratches, deformation, or missing teeth on the surface of the right rear wheel speed sensor tone ring (magnetic ring) cause abnormal Hall signal pulses.
- 5Performance drift in the sampling resistor or filter capacitor of the IPB system internal signal processing circuit for the right rear wheel speed channel, resulting in an abnormal signal interpretation threshold.
- 1Connect the VDS diagnostic tool, enter the IPB system, and read the live data stream. Monitor the right rear wheel speed signal under stationary, accelerating, constant speed, and turning conditions. Check for anomalies such as signal jumps, negative values, or a >3km/h difference compared to the other three wheels.
- 2Raise the vehicle. Visually inspect the right rear wheel speed sensor mounting hole for looseness and the sensor head for oil or metal swarf. Clean the sensor end face and use a feeler gauge to measure the clearance to the tone ring (standard: 0.3-1.2 mm; Song PLUS DM-i standard: approx. 0.8 mm).
- 3Disconnect the IPB wiring harness from the right rear wheel speed sensor connector. Measure the resistance on the sensor side (magnetic type: approximately 1.0-1.5 kΩ; Hall type: supply power first, then measure the signal voltage). Measure harness continuity, focusing on the resistance stability of the section from the body main harness to the wheel end while bending the harness.
- 4Check the right rear wheel hub bearing axial play: Grasp the tire at the 6 and 12 o'clock positions with both hands. Push and pull to check for obvious free play. If the play is >0.5 mm, replace the wheel hub bearing assembly to restore sensor air gap stability.
- 5If the hardware inspection reveals no abnormalities, update the IPB system software (some early Song PLUS DM-i versions have a wheel speed signal filtering algorithm defect and require an upgrade to V2.5 or later), and complete the zero-point calibration for the yaw rate sensor and wheel speed sensors.
- 6Clear the fault code and perform a road test. Verify right rear wheel speed signal continuity under ABS activation conditions (e.g., braking on a low-traction surface). Confirm the fault code does not recur before returning the vehicle.
Iron filings contaminated the right rear wheel speed sensor, causing intermittent signal loss.
Concealed open circuit in boot wiring harness at flex point
Worn wheel hub bearing caused dynamic air gap to exceed tolerance
IPB system software false positive (phantom fault)
Heat-warped tone ring causes erratic signal when hot