This DTC indicates a communication link fault between the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control unit and the Left Front Impact Sensor (LFIS) — Qin Plus
This DTC indicates a communication link fault between the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control unit and the Left Front Impact Sensor (LFIS).
This typically indicates an interrupted LIN bus or private CAN communication between the sensor and the Airbag Control Module (ACM), a data validation failure, or a signal timeout.
The LFIS monitors deceleration changes in the vehicle's left front area and provides the SRS control unit with critical collision severity data to determine whether to deploy the driver airbag, left curtain airbag, and seatbelt pretensioner.
This communication fault prevents the control unit from receiving collision information for this zone.
Consequently, it may cause unintended airbag deployment (fail-safe mode) or delay or prevent the activation of left-side protection devices during an actual collision.
This constitutes a critical fault in the active safety system.
- 1Water ingress, oxidation, or backed-out pins in the left front crash sensor wiring harness connector: The sensor mounts near the left front longitudinal beam or bumper bracket. Connector seals frequently fail after driving through water, washing the vehicle, or driving in rain, corroding the terminals and increasing contact resistance.
- 2Sensor power supply or ground circuit fault: Includes blown fuse, open circuit, or short circuit (especially an improperly secured wiring harness after front-end accident repairs rubbing against metal body edges and causing insulation damage).
- 3Left front crash sensor internal fault: A damaged internal accelerometer or communication chip prevents response to the SRS control unit handshake signal.
- 4SRS control unit (airbag control module) internal communication port fault: The control unit circuit module receiving this specific channel signal is damaged.
- 5Wiring harness shielding failure or electromagnetic interference: Damaged front compartment wiring harness shielding causes high-frequency interference, resulting in communication data packet checksum failure.
- 1Use a BYD VDS2000 or Launch X431 diagnostic tool to access the SRS system. Read all fault codes and record the freeze frame data. Confirm whether B165800 is a current (Present) or historical (History) fault, and check for related fault codes (such as B165700 Parameter Error).
- 2Disconnect the battery negative terminal and wait 3 minutes to fully discharge the SRS capacitor and ensure safe operation. Locate the left front crash sensor (usually mounted on the front section of the left front longitudinal rail or behind the headlamp bracket) and check the sensor housing for physical damage, cracks, or signs of water ingress.
- 3Disconnect the sensor connector and check the terminals for oxidation, backed-out pins, or spread contacts. Clean the terminals with electrical contact cleaner and apply conductive protective compound. Measure the resistance between the terminals on the sensor side to confirm no internal short circuit (standard value is typically infinity or matches the manufacturer's specification).
- 4Reconnect the connector, turn the ignition switch to ON (do not start), and use a multimeter to measure the sensor supply voltage (should be 9-16V, depending on vehicle model), ground resistance (should be less than 1Ω), and LIN line voltage (typically a 7-11V pulse voltage, averaging about 9V).
- 5If the voltage is abnormal, disconnect the SRS control unit connector and use an oscilloscope to check the LIN bus waveform. Verify the control unit sends the correct wake-up signal (typically a 12V high level or a specific frequency square wave). Also measure wiring harness continuity, inspecting the harness fixing point on the front left longitudinal beam in the front compartment for wear.
- 6If wiring harness measurements are normal, perform a sensor substitution test: replace the left front crash sensor with a known good unit, clear the fault code, perform an ignition cycle test, and use the diagnostic tool to run the 'Crash Sensor Calibration' procedure (some models require a dedicated calibration tool).
- 7If the fault persists after replacing the sensor, check the SRS control unit software version and upgrade it if necessary. If the software is normal, this indicates an internal SRS control unit fault. Replace the control unit and reconfigure the vehicle VIN and sensor parameters.
Left front crash sensor communication lost after water ingress
After accident repair, a loose wiring harness connection caused an intermittent communication fault.
Hard fault due to sensor body damage.
False positive caused by software calibration error