On BYD E Series and Yuan Series models, DTC C1208 indicates the left rear wheel speed sensor (RLWSS) signal voltage to the ABS/ESP control module is 0V — Atto 8
On BYD E Series and Yuan Series models, DTC C1208 indicates the left rear wheel speed sensor (RLWSS) signal voltage to the ABS/ESP control module is 0V.
The control module detects no wheel speed pulse signal for over 100ms, indicating an open circuit, a short to ground, or a failed sensor.
The wheel speed signal is a core input parameter for the Anti-lock Braking System (ABS), Electronic Brakeforce Distribution (EBD), Traction Control System (TCS), and Electronic Stability Control (ESC).
A missing signal forces these safety systems into fail-safe mode (limp mode), halts their operation, and illuminates multiple warning lights.
In generic OBD-II definitions for Bosch ABS systems, C1208 typically indicates "Inlet Valve Coil Rear Circuit Short To Battery".
However, some BYD battery electric vehicles redefine this code as a left rear wheel speed sensor signal fault.
Consult the vehicle-specific workshop manual during repair.
- 1Left rear wheel speed sensor internal coil open circuit or damaged (abnormal resistance; normal: 1.0-1.5kΩ)
- 2Sensor wiring harness wear, breakage, or short to ground in the suspension travel area, especially after driving on rough roads.
- 3Aged sensor connector seal allows moisture intrusion and pin oxidation, causing poor contact or signal interruption.
- 4Signal ring gear (tone wheel) damaged, missing teeth, heavily contaminated (metal shavings attached), or excessive sensor gap (>1.5 mm)
- 5ABS control module internal signal processing circuit fault or abnormal power supply (blown fuse, poor ground)
- 1Connect the VDS or Launch diagnostic tool. Read and confirm DTC C1208 and freeze frame data. Verify if the left rear wheel speed remains at 0 km/h, and check for accompanying fault codes such as C1209 (right rear).
- 2Raise the vehicle. Visually inspect the left rear wheel speed sensor installation and wiring harness routing. Closely inspect the wiring harness sleeve near the shock absorber and body pass-through hole for wear and exposed wires.
- 3Disconnect the sensor connector. Measure the voltage at the sensor power supply terminal (12V±0.5V with ignition ON) and the resistance at the ground terminal (less than 1Ω) to confirm the power supply is normal.
- 4Measure the sensor body resistance. Standard value: 1.0–1.5 kΩ (at 20°C). If the resistance is infinite (open circuit) or close to 0 Ω (short circuit), replace the sensor. Also, set a multimeter to the AC voltage range, rotate the wheel, and measure the signal output. The sensor should generate 0.1–2 V AC.
- 5Inspect the signal tone ring, remove any metal filings, and verify there are no cracks or missing teeth. Use a feeler gauge to check the air gap between the sensor and the tone ring (standard: 0.3-1.2 mm).
- 6If the sensor and wiring harness are normal, check the ABS control module connector (32-pin or 24-pin) for backed-out pins or oxidation. If necessary, measure circuit continuity between the module and the sensor.
- 7Replace the faulty component (replace the sensor first, repair the wiring harness second, and consider the ABS pump assembly last), clear the fault code, and perform a road test to verify the repair (apply hard braking at speeds above 40 km/h to test the ABS function).
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