DTC B1676-00 indicates the airbag control module (SRS ECU) detects a communication interruption or circuit fault in the Left Rear Side Impact Sensor (LR-SIS) — Qin Plus
DTC B1676-00 indicates the airbag control module (SRS ECU) detects a communication interruption or circuit fault in the Left Rear Side Impact Sensor (LR-SIS).
The sensor typically mounts on the vehicle's left rear side panel, inside the C-pillar trim panel, or on the side of the rear seat to monitor collision acceleration at the left rear of the vehicle.
The ECU sets this fault code when it detects an open circuit, a short circuit, or internal sensor resistance outside the calibrated range (typically 2.0–3.0 kΩ, depending on the vehicle model).
This SRS communication link fault may prevent the side airbags and side curtain airbags from deploying correctly during a side impact.
It can also force the entire airbag system into a degraded protection mode, severely compromising passive safety performance.
- 1Sensor connector loose, oxidized, or water ingress: Because the left rear side impact sensor is located in the vehicle side panel, wading, car washing, or damp conditions can oxidize or corrode the plug. Vehicle vibration can also loosen the plug.
- 2Harness wear or breakage: Rear seat adjustment, pressure from objects, or audio/soundproofing modifications may crush or cut the harness in the C-pillar or under the seat, causing an open circuit or intermittent poor contact.
- 3Sensor body fault: Damage to the internal piezoelectric element or processing circuit causes an abnormal resistance value or no signal output.
- 4Poor contact at SRS ECU terminals: loose connection at the airbag control module connector, backed-out pins, or ECU internal monitoring circuit fault.
- 5Electromagnetic interference or abnormal voltage: Low vehicle battery voltage, or electromagnetic interference generated by installed aftermarket electronic equipment, distorts sensor communication signals.
- 1Safety preparation: Set the vehicle to OFF, disconnect the low-voltage battery negative terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS system capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Locate the sensor: Refer to the repair manual, remove the left rear quarter inner trim panel or lower C-pillar trim panel, and locate the left rear side impact sensor (usually marked 'SIS LR' or similar).
- 3Visual inspection: Check that the sensor connector is fully seated, the locking tab is intact, and the connector is free of moisture, oxidation, or foreign matter; inspect the wiring harness for signs of wear, crushing, or breakage.
- 4Resistance measurement: Disconnect the sensor connector. Use a multimeter to measure the sensor resistance (standard value is typically 2.0-3.0 kΩ; refer to the vehicle manual for specific values). If the resistance is 0 or infinite, replace the sensor.
- 5Circuit continuity test: Measure the wiring harness continuity between the sensor connector and the SRS ECU to check for an open circuit; measure the wiring harness insulation to ground and power supply to check for a short circuit.
- 6Repair and replacement: Clean the oxidized connector and apply conductive grease. Repair the damaged wiring harness (solder and insulate with heat-shrink tubing). Replace with a genuine sensor if necessary.
- 7System reset: Reconnect all connectors and the battery negative terminal. Use a VDS2000 or Launch X431 diagnostic tool to clear the fault codes. Execute the 'SRS system self-check' and 'crash sensor zero-point calibration' procedures. Confirm the warning light turns off and no current fault codes remain.
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