DTC B1670-00 indicates an abnormally low-resistance connection between the right side impact sensor (SIS) signal circuit and body ground, resulting in a short to ground — Qin Plus
DTC B1670-00 indicates an abnormally low-resistance connection between the right side impact sensor (SIS) signal circuit and body ground, resulting in a short to ground.
The BYD SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) architecture utilizes a piezoelectric or MEMS accelerometer for the right side impact sensor.
This sensor mounts inside the right B-pillar or the right front or rear door cavity and monitors side impact acceleration.
A short to ground prevents the SRS control unit (ACU) from receiving a valid analog acceleration signal (typically a 0.5-4.5V voltage signal).
Instead, the ACU receives a ground potential near 0V.
This condition triggers the ACU to enter fault protection mode, disable the right side airbag and curtain airbag deployment, and illuminate the airbag fault warning lamp.
If the short circuit occurs during an impact, it can cause unintended airbag deployment or failure to deploy, creating a serious safety hazard.
- 1Long-term bending at the door hinge wears the insulation on the right front or right rear door wiring harness. The signal wire (usually yellow) contacts the metal door frame, creating a short to ground.
- 2Internal sealing failure of the right side impact sensor body allows rainwater or car wash fluid to enter the sensor, causing a circuit board short circuit. This commonly results from incorrect installation of the waterproof sealing ring after accident repairs.
- 3Water ingress or a damp environment oxidizes or corrodes the pins of the sensor connector (2-pin or 3-pin plug) under the right B-pillar, forming a micro-short circuit or a complete short to ground.
- 4After a front or right-side collision, the wiring harness sustained undetected crush damage. Technicians replaced only exterior parts during repair without checking SRS harness insulation.
- 5Internal fault in the SRS control unit (ACU) signal processing circuit causing a false short-to-ground report (rare, <5% probability).
- 1Safety Preparation: Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal. Wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment. Wear an anti-static wrist strap. Prepare a multimeter and insulated probes.
- 2Locate the sensor: Refer to the vehicle repair manual (E1/Qin Series) to confirm the right side impact sensor location (usually inside the right B-pillar lower trim panel or the front of the right front door cavity). Remove the corresponding interior trim panel to expose the sensor.
- 3Disconnect the connector: Unplug the sensor connector and use a multimeter to measure the resistance at the sensor-side terminals (Normal: infinite or specific internal resistance; Short circuit: close to 0Ω). If the sensor is normal, proceed to the next step.
- 4Harness continuity test: Measure the signal wire resistance to ground from the sensor connector towards the SRS ACU (usually under the center console or in the front compartment). If the resistance is <1Ω, the circuit has a short to ground.
- 5Inspect in sections: focus on the inside of the wiring harness sleeve (rubber boot) at the door hinge. Peel back the sleeve and check for worn or exposed wires. Also inspect the floor wiring harness below the B-pillar for crush damage from seat mounting bolts or corrosion from water ingress in the carpet.
- 6Repair verification: After repairing the damaged wiring harness (insulate with heat-shrink tubing) or replacing the sensor, reconnect all components. Restore battery power. Clear the fault code using VDS or a Launch diagnostic tool. Perform an SRS system self-check (turn the ignition switch ON and verify the warning light turns off). Finally, perform a simulated crash signal test (use a special tool or lightly tap the sensor to verify the data stream).
Right front door wiring harness chafed and shorted at the hinge
Sensor water ingress caused intermittent short circuit
Loose connector after accident repairs caused a short circuit.
SRS control unit false positive