This DTC indicates the SRS electronic control unit detects a functional fault in the Left Rear Side Impact Sensor (mounted in the lower left B-pillar or inside the left rear quarter panel) — Qin Plus
This DTC indicates the SRS electronic control unit detects a functional fault in the Left Rear Side Impact Sensor (mounted in the lower left B-pillar or inside the left rear quarter panel).
Specifically, the ECU receives no valid acceleration signal, the signal exceeds the normal threshold (typically 0.5-4.5V), or the system detects an open or short circuit.
This sensor monitors side-impact acceleration on the left rear of the vehicle.
The ECU uses this signal to determine whether to deploy the left curtain airbag and rear side airbag.
When this fault occurs, the system enters fail-safe mode, illuminates the airbag warning light, and disables the related side airbags, significantly increasing the risk of occupant protection failure during a side collision.
- 1A faulty piezoelectric accelerometer or signal processing IC inside the sensor body causes output signal drift or no signal.
- 2Water ingress and oxidation at the left lower B-pillar wiring harness connector (common after car washing or wading) increases signal wire contact resistance or causes a short circuit.
- 3The body wiring harness breaks at the B-pillar hinge bend, or incorrect harness routing after accident repairs causes an open circuit.
- 4Loose or detached sensor mounting bracket, or external impact to the sensor, causing the internal inertial measurement unit to lose calibration.
- 5SRS ECU internal sampling circuit fault (less common; confirm after ruling out wiring faults)
- 1Use the BYD VDS3000 diagnostic tool to read the complete fault codes and freeze frame data. Check for accompanying sub-fault codes such as B167711 (short to ground) or B167712 (short to power). Record the vehicle speed and ambient temperature at the time of the fault.
- 2Disconnect the negative battery terminal and wait at least 90 seconds for the SRS capacitor to fully discharge. Remove the left lower B-pillar trim panel and the left rear door sill trim panel. Visually inspect the crash sensor exterior for cracks and verify the installation torque marks align (standard torque is usually 8-10 N·m).
- 3Disconnect the sensor 2-pin connector. Inspect the pins for oxidation, push-out, or water ingress. Clean with electrical contact cleaner and apply conductive grease.
- 4Measure the harness-side voltage: With the ignition ON, the signal wire-to-ground voltage should be approximately 2.5 V (reference voltage), and the power wire should measure 12 V (battery voltage). Measure the insulation: Verify the signal wire-to-ground resistance is greater than 1 MΩ.
- 5If the wiring is normal, remove the sensor and measure its static resistance (typically 2.0-3.0kΩ; refer to the repair manual for specific values). Lightly tap the sensor while observing the resistance. If the value does not change, the sensor has internal damage.
- 6Replace the left rear side impact sensor (Note: For some high-trim models, perform the 'Replace Crash Sensor' configuration procedure in VDS to write the sensor serial number). Reconnect the wiring harness and verify the waterproof rubber seal is intact.
- 7Reconnect the battery, clear the fault code, and perform the SRS system self-check (approx. 10 seconds). After confirming the warning light turns off, use the dedicated diagnostic tool to read the live data stream. Lightly tap near the sensor mounting position to verify the acceleration signal changes.
- 8Perform a road test to confirm intermittent fault codes do not reappear on bumpy roads. Finally, check and clear all history fault codes.
Left rear sensor intermittently reporting fault after wading
Open circuit in wiring harness following accident repair caused fault
Sensor ageing caused signal drift