DTC B165D-00 indicates a communication link interruption between the Supplemental Restraint System (SRS) Electronic Control Unit (ECU) and the Right Front Frontal Impact Sensor (RFFIS) — Qin Plus
DTC B165D-00 indicates a communication link interruption between the Supplemental Restraint System (SRS) Electronic Control Unit (ECU) and the Right Front Frontal Impact Sensor (RFFIS).
In BYD vehicle architectures, this sensor typically features a 2-wire (signal loop) or 3-wire (power/signal/ground) design.
It communicates via a hard-wired connection through the SRS ECU G10 connector, specifically the G10-3 signal terminal and G10-14 return terminal.
The ECU sets this DTC if it detects the sensor circuit resistance exceeds the threshold (open circuit >10kΩ or short circuit <200Ω) during a monitoring cycle, or if it receives no valid sensor data for 3 consecutive monitoring cycles.
This fault forces the SRS into a degraded mode, disabling the right-side frontal collision detection function.
During a frontal impact, the system may delay or fail to deploy the right front airbag and right-side seat belt pretensioner.
The instrument cluster SRS warning light remains illuminated to indicate a system fault.
- 1Sensor electrical connector loose, terminal backed out, or poor contact: Commonly caused by failing to fully engage the connector locking tab after front bumper repairs, headlamp replacements, or accident repairs, or by prolonged driving on rough roads vibrating the connector loose.
- 2Wiring harness open circuit or insulation damage: Panel adhesive covering the wiring harness in the front side member area during accident repairs, sharp edges cutting the harness, or long-term bending breaking the internal copper strands; rodent damage to the harness insulation causing a hidden short circuit.
- 3Connector corrosion and oxidation: Driving through water, directly spraying the engine compartment with a high-pressure washer, or aging seals allow rainwater to seep into the sensor connector, causing terminal corrosion and increased contact resistance (>5Ω).
- 4Internal sensor body fault: The internal piezoelectric element or diagnostic resistor (typically 2.0-2.4kΩ) failed, preventing valid signal generation despite a normal physical connection.
- 5Abnormal SRS ECU connector terminals: Terminal 3 or 14 of connector G10 is spread, backed out, or oxidized, causing poor contact with the wiring harness. Wiggling the wiring harness causes the fault to occur intermittently.
- 1Safe power-down: Turn off the ignition switch, disconnect the 12V battery negative cable, and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment during repair.
- 2Locate the component: Open the hood, remove the right front wheel arch liner or front bumper upper cover, and find the right front crash sensor mounted on the right side of the radiator support or behind the right front headlamp.
- 3Visual inspection: Verify the sensor connector is fully inserted with an audible locking 'click'. Inspect the connector housing for cracks and a missing sealing ring. Check the wiring harness within 20 cm for damage, burns, or pinch marks.
- 4Sensor body test: Disconnect the connector and use a digital multimeter to measure the resistance between the two sensor terminals. The standard value is 2.0-2.4kΩ (at 20°C). If the resistance is 0Ω (short circuit) or infinite (open circuit), replace the sensor.
- 5Harness continuity test: Disconnect the SRS ECU G10 connector. Measure the resistance from the sensor harness-side connector to terminals G10-3 (signal wire) and G10-14 (return wire). Resistance must be less than 1.0 Ω. If resistance is too high, repair the open circuit.
- 6Harness insulation test: Measure the insulation resistance from both sensor harness terminals to body ground and to the power supply. Resistance must be greater than 10 MΩ. If the resistance is low, locate and wrap the damaged point on the harness, or replace the harness assembly.
- 7ECU terminal inspection: Check terminals 3 and 14 of connector G10 for oxidation or deformation. If necessary, adjust them using the dedicated terminal repair tool or replace the connector.
- 8Repair and recovery: Clean corroded terminals (use electrical contact cleaner + non-woven cloth). Apply an appropriate amount of conductive paste (not insulating silicone grease). Reconnect all connectors and verify the double locking mechanism engages. Secure the wiring harness with cable ties to prevent friction against metal edges.
- 9System initialization: Reconnect the battery, turn the ignition switch to the ON position, and verify the instrument panel SRS warning light turns off after 6 seconds. Use the diagnostic tool to read the fault codes and confirm B165D-00 changes to a history code or disappears.
- 10Final verification: After clearing the fault code, perform a road test (including bumpy roads) or manually shake the wiring harness to simulate vibration. Confirm the fault does not return. Verify the SRS system has no current stored fault codes.
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