DTC C052901 indicates a communication interruption or loss of data validity between the IPB (Intelligent Integrated Braking System) control unit and the Steering Angle Sensor (SAS) — Atto 8
DTC C052901 indicates a communication interruption or loss of data validity between the IPB (Intelligent Integrated Braking System) control unit and the Steering Angle Sensor (SAS).
The steering angle sensor mounts on the steering column and transmits steering wheel angle, rotational speed, and direction information in real time to the IPB, VCU, ADAS, and other modules via the CAN bus.
It provides the core input signal for the Electronic Stability Control (ESC), automatic parking, lane keeping, and Autonomous Emergency Braking (AEB) systems.
The IPB triggers this fault when it fails to receive a valid steering angle data frame within 500 ms, or detects a sensor response timeout or checksum error.
The vehicle then enters a degraded mode: ESC function is limited or disabled, skid control fails, and automatic parking is unavailable.
Extreme cases may alter brake assist characteristics, but the system retains basic hydraulic braking.
- 1Steering angle sensor internal fault: Damaged Hall effect element, internal MCU crash, or EEPROM data loss prevents valid signal output.
- 2Abnormal steering column wiring harness connection: The steering angle sensor connector below the steering wheel (usually integrated into the combination switch assembly) is loose, has backed-out terminals, or shows water ingress and oxidation; or frequent steering column rotation caused wiring harness wear or breakage.
- 3Power supply and ground fault: 12V battery voltage below 10V, blown sensor power supply fuse, or poor contact in the ground circuit causing sensor initialization failure.
- 4IPB system software defect: Early software versions have low fault tolerance for steering angle sensor signals and falsely detect a missing module during rapid steering inputs or voltage fluctuations.
- 5Modification or external interference: Non-OEM steering wheel replacement, installation of an OBD window closer or steering wheel trim causing physical interference, or external devices occupying the CAN bus, causing communication congestion.
- 1Diagnostic tool check: Use VDS2000/VDS3000 to access the IPB system, read the complete fault codes and freeze frame data, and check for related faults such as C052B (steering angle sensor signal error) and U0416 (IPB communication fault); view the live data stream to confirm if the steering angle value displays as 'invalid' or remains fixed when turning the steering wheel.
- 2Basic check: Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal for 5 minutes, then reconnect power and check if the fault code changes to a history code. Inspect the combination switch connector (grey or black 18-pin connector) at the steering column below the steering wheel for looseness, backed-out pins, or water corrosion. Clean and apply conductive grease if necessary.
- 3Circuit measurement: Keep the ignition switch ON. Measure the voltage and resistance at the steering angle sensor connector — power supply (Pins 1/2) 12V ± 0.5V, ground (Pins 3/4) < 0.1Ω, CAN-H (Pin 5) approximately 2.6-2.8V, and CAN-L (Pin 6) approximately 2.2-2.4V. Disconnect the battery, then measure the CAN terminal resistance; it should be approximately 60Ω.
- 4Sensor calibration: Access 'Special Functions' → 'Steering Angle Sensor Calibration' on the diagnostic tool. Follow the prompts to center the steering wheel (within ±5°) and perform zero-position learning. Turn the steering wheel full lock left and hold for 2 seconds, turn full lock right and hold for 2 seconds, then return to center. After a successful calibration, read the data stream to confirm the angle value is 0° ±3°.
- 5Software update: Check the IPB control unit software version against the BYD technical bulletin (e.g., TPI-2022-BYD-035). If the version is below V2.1.8, update to the latest version to optimize the steering angle sensor signal processing logic.
- 6Component replacement: If the above steps fail, replace the steering column combination switch assembly (usually part number SA-3774100 or corresponding model number). After replacement, recalibrate the steering angle and initialize the ESC system. Finally, perform a road test at speeds above 20 km/h to verify ESC function.
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