This DTC indicates interrupted communication or a physical disconnection between the airbag control unit (SRS ECU) and the Left Side Impact Sensor — Qin Plus
This DTC indicates interrupted communication or a physical disconnection between the airbag control unit (SRS ECU) and the Left Side Impact Sensor.
The Left Side Impact Sensor typically mounts in the lower left B-pillar or the left front seat side trim area.
It monitors left-side collision acceleration signals and provides key input for side airbag deployment decisions (including side airbags and side curtain airbags).
The ECU records B1666 if it fails to receive the sensor ID response code within the specified monitoring period, if LIN bus communication times out, or if it detects an open power or ground circuit.
This fault forces the left-side airbag system into fail-safe mode.
During a side impact, the airbags may fail to deploy or deploy late, severely compromising occupant side-impact protection.
Additionally, the instrument panel SRS warning lamp (airbag warning light) illuminates continuously, and the system may report the safety system fault status to the vehicle control unit via the CAN bus.
- 1Sensor wiring harness connector loose, terminal backed out, or completely disconnected: Commonly occurs after accident repairs or interior trim removal and installation (such as replacing the left front door or B-pillar trim) due to failing to tighten the connector to the standard torque (usually 8-10N·m), or a broken locking tab causing the connector to vibrate loose while driving.
- 2Physical damage or corrosion to the wiring harness: Water ingress, underbody scraping, or rodent damage to the left sill wiring harness causes open circuits or shorts to ground in the power supply line (+B), ground line (GND), or LIN communication line. Connector pin oxidation creates high resistance (>5Ω).
- 3Internal sensor body fault: damaged internal accelerometer component, PCB cold solder joints, aged sealing ring causing water ingress and internal short circuit, or sensor software version mismatch with the ECU (common when using non-genuine parts for accident repairs).
- 4SRS ECU communication interface fault: Damaged internal ECU LIN transceiver, or damaged shielded wire between the ECU and sensor causing electromagnetic interference (EMI) that results in an excessively high communication bit error rate.
- 5Deformed mounting bracket or poor ground connection: Failing to restore the sensor mounting base to standard during accident repairs causes a poor ground between the sensor and the vehicle body (ground resistance >1Ω), affecting the signal reference potential.
- 1Diagnostic Confirmation: Access the SRS system using a BYD VDS2000/3000 or Launch X-431 diagnostic tool. Read the complete fault codes to confirm whether B1666 is an active or history code. Review the freeze frame data for vehicle status (vehicle speed, timestamp). Check for accompanying B1667 (left-side communication error) or U-series communication fault codes.
- 2Safety preparation and visual inspection: Turn off the ignition switch, disconnect the negative battery terminal, and wait 90 seconds (to discharge the SRS capacitor). Remove the left B-pillar lower trim panel (trim clips are usually located beside the seat belt retractor cover). Verify the white connector on the crash sensor (part number usually starts with 5A-) is fully inserted with an audible 'click', and inspect the connector for a missing waterproof seal.
- 3Electrical circuit measurement: Keep the ignition switch OFF, disconnect the sensor connector, and measure the harness-side terminals: ① Power supply terminal (usually pin 1, yellow wire) voltage to ground should be battery voltage (12-14V); ② Ground terminal (usually pin 3, brown wire) resistance to ground should be <1Ω; ③ LIN line (usually pin 2, blue/black wire) resistance to ground should be 50-70Ω (terminating resistance). Use a multimeter continuity buzzer to check harness continuity and confirm no open circuits, short circuits, or high resistance.
- 4Sensor unit verification: If the wiring is normal, perform a cross-check. Swap the left and right sensors, clear the fault code, and test drive the vehicle. If the fault code changes to 'B1667-Right side impact sensor not connected', the sensor unit is faulty. Alternatively, measure the LIN line waveform directly using an oscilloscope. A normal signal shows a square wave with a 12V high level and a 0V low level. If the sensor does not respond, the sensor unit is faulty.
- 5Repair and calibration: Replace with genuine parts (match the part number to the VIN; some models require a sensor with a G mark). When repairing the wiring harness, seal with waterproof heat-shrink tubing and sand the ground point to bare metal. Install the sensor to the specified torque (usually 8N·m) with the arrow pointing toward the front of the vehicle. Reconnect the battery, clear the fault code, enter 'Special Functions', and execute 'SRS System Self-Diagnosis' and 'Crash Sensor Zero-Point Calibration'. Finally, perform a tap test to verify the repair (lightly tap the B-pillar with a special rubber hammer and observe the sensor acceleration value changes in the diagnostic tool data stream).
Unlocked connector after accident repair causes intermittent warning.
After driving through water, the wiring harness corroded, causing an open circuit in the sensor.
Aftermarket floor sound deadening installation pinched the wiring harness, causing a short circuit.
Damaged internal chip caused sensor communication failure.