DTC C050E00 indicates the IPB (Intelligent Integrated Braking System) or ABS module detects an abnormal short circuit to vehicle ground (GND) in the left rear wheel speed sensor (WSS) power supply circuit (typically the 12V supply line) — Qin Plus
DTC C050E00 indicates the IPB (Intelligent Integrated Braking System) or ABS module detects an abnormal short circuit to vehicle ground (GND) in the left rear wheel speed sensor (WSS) power supply circuit (typically the 12V supply line).
This supply circuit provides the operating voltage for the Hall-effect or magnetic wheel speed sensor.
When a short to ground occurs, the power driver circuit inside the ABS module detects overcurrent or a voltage drop to nearly 0V, triggering the protection mechanism and storing the fault code.
This fault causes a missing or abnormal left rear wheel speed signal, forcing active safety functions such as ABS, ESC, TCS, and Automatic Emergency Braking (AEB) into fail-safe mode (conventional braking).
The instrument cluster illuminates multiple warning lamps, including ABS, ESC, and EBD.
This severely compromises driving safety and creates a risk of wheel lock-up, especially on slippery roads or during emergency braking.
- 1Damaged or aged insulation on the left rear wheel speed sensor wiring harness rubs against metal components (such as the body side member, suspension bracket, or wheel arch liner) during driving, shorting to the chassis and causing the power wire to short to ground.
- 2Short circuit inside the wheel speed sensor body between the power supply pin and the sensor housing or ground pin (usually resulting from water ingress due to seal failure, a burnt internal coil, or PCB breakdown).
- 3Water enters the sensor connector (located at the left rear fender or chassis wiring harness joint) due to wading, high-pressure washing, or an aging sealing ring, causing an electrolytic short circuit or conductive corrosion between the internal power and ground terminals.
- 4A breakdown short circuit in the internal power drive circuit of the ABS/IPB control module (such as a MOSFET or smart power IC) causes the output port to remain continuously grounded.
- 5Vehicle accident repairs, chassis modifications, or improper wiring harness securing pinching or crushing the harness, or loose retaining clips allowing the harness to interfere with and chafe against rotating components (such as the half shaft or brake disc dust shield).
- 1Connect the VDS or dedicated diagnostic tool. Read the freeze frame data for DTC C050E00. Record key parameters when the fault occurred, such as vehicle speed, voltage, and temperature. Clear the fault code and perform a road test to confirm whether the fault is persistent.
- 2Raise the vehicle and remove the left rear wheel. Visually inspect the wheel speed sensor for physical damage. Closely inspect the sensor connector (usually located near the shock absorber or body wiring harness connection) for water ingress, terminal corrosion, looseness, or damaged wiring insulation.
- 3Disconnect the left rear wheel speed sensor connector. Use a multimeter to measure the resistance between the sensor-side power pin and body ground. Normal resistance is greater than 10MΩ (open circuit). A resistance less than 1Ω confirms a short circuit. Also measure the resistance to ground of the corresponding pin on the ABS module side to determine whether the short circuit is in the wiring harness or internal to the module.
- 4If the wiring harness shorts to ground, strip back the harness sleeve in sections from the left rear wheel hub to the ABS module (usually located in the engine compartment or cabin firewall). Inspect sections passing through sheet metal holes, retaining clips, and areas adjacent to suspension components to locate damaged insulation. After repair, wrap the area with two layers of waterproof insulating tape or heat-shrink tubing.
- 5If the wiring harness is normal, measure the resistance between the power supply and ground pins on the wheel speed sensor itself (normally open circuit or high resistance). If the resistance is abnormally low (<100Ω), this indicates an internal short circuit in the sensor. Replace the left rear wheel speed sensor (BYD part numbers usually begin with SC- or HA-).
- 6If the sensor and wiring harness are normal, measure the resistance between the corresponding power supply pin of the ABS/IPB module connector and ground. A short circuit indicates an internal module fault. Replace the IPB assembly or ABS control unit (perform coding and bleeding procedures).
- 7After completing the repair, reconnect all connectors, use the diagnostic tool to clear the fault code, and perform a dynamic test: drive in a straight line at 20-40 km/h and observe the data stream to verify the left rear wheel speed signal synchronizes with the right rear and front wheel speeds; perform an emergency braking test to confirm normal ABS operation and verify the fault code does not return.
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