DTC B16E300 indicates a current monitoring anomaly or communication error in the Electronic Parking Brake (EPB) left rear wheel actuator (motor) — Qin Plus
DTC B16E300 indicates a current monitoring anomaly or communication error in the Electronic Parking Brake (EPB) left rear wheel actuator (motor).
The EPB control module sets this fault when it detects the left rear parking motor operating current exceeds the calibrated threshold (normal range approximately 8-15 A) or fails to establish valid communication with the left rear motor.
Possible causes include an internal motor short or open circuit, mechanical binding, poor wiring connections, or a control module fault.
When this fault triggers, the system enters a safety protection mode.
This mode may prevent the electronic parking brake from releasing or applying, disable the Auto Hold function, and illuminate an instrument cluster warning.
Extreme cases immobilize the vehicle or create a rollaway risk.
- 1Excessive wear of the internal carbon brushes or a burnt commutator in the left rear EPB motor leads to abnormally high contact resistance, causing the operating current to deviate from the standard value.
- 2Oxidation, corrosion from water ingress, or backed-out pins at the motor wiring harness connector cause excessive contact resistance or interrupt signal transmission.
- 3Mechanical binding or poor return of the left rear brake caliper causes excessive motor load and triggers overcurrent protection.
- 4Chassis wiring harness rubs against body or suspension components, damaging the insulation and causing intermittent short or open circuits.
- 5Outdated EPB control module software or current monitoring circuit hardware fault causing a false DTC.
- 1Use the VDS2000/VDS3.0 diagnostic tool to read the complete fault codes and freeze frame data. Determine whether B16E300 is a current or history fault, and record the specific abnormal current monitoring values.
- 2Raise the vehicle and visually inspect the condition of the left rear wheel EPB motor wiring harness connector. Check the sealing ring for aging. Measure the power supply voltage at the connector (must have 12V constant power) and verify a good ground connection.
- 3Disconnect the connector and measure the static resistance of the left rear EPB motor (normal value: 0.8-1.2 Ω). Compare the reading with the right rear wheel. Perform an actuation test and check for smooth motor operation, abnormal noise, or binding.
- 4Inspect the wiring harness routing along the chassis, focusing on interference points with the rear suspension and body. Check the corrugated conduit for damage. Repair any harness damage and re-secure the routing.
- 5If motor resistance is abnormal, operation binds, or internal water ingress occurs, replace the left rear electronic parking brake assembly (including motor). If only the wiring harness is faulty, repair the harness and apply conductive paste.
- 6After replacement or repair, use the diagnostic tool to perform the EPB system initialization procedure, including 'parking brake bedding-in', 'clearance self-learning', and 'current calibration'.
- 7Clear the fault code and perform a road test: test the parking brake apply/release and Auto Hold activation/deactivation functions on level ground and slopes. Verify the left and right wheel motor operating currents are consistent (12-13A).
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