DTC C059400 indicates a functional fault in the brake booster motor within the IPB (Intelligent Power Brake) system — Qin Plus
DTC C059400 indicates a functional fault in the brake booster motor within the IPB (Intelligent Power Brake) system.
This brushless DC motor integrates into the IPB electro-hydraulic module to replace the traditional vacuum booster.
It provides electric brake assist based on pedal input and coordinates energy recovery.
The IPB control unit sets this code upon detecting abnormal motor current, abnormal speed feedback, a drive circuit fault, or motor mechanical binding.
This fault causes a hard brake pedal, reduced brake assist, and increased braking distance.
It also degrades or disables functions including ABS, ESC, and Automatic Emergency Braking, severely compromising driving safety.
- 1Internal damage to the IPB brake booster motor: Motor bearing wear, rotor seizure, or permanent magnet demagnetization, causing abnormal motor operation or abnormal current draw.
- 2Motor drive circuit fault: A damaged MOSFET, gate driver chip, or sampling resistor in the internal IPB H-bridge drive circuit causes an abnormal motor drive signal.
- 3Abnormal power supply: Poor contact in the IPB module terminal 30 constant power or terminal 31 ground circuit, loose fuse connection, or voltage fluctuation (below 9V or above 16V), causing unstable motor power supply.
- 4Motor position sensor fault: Abnormal signal from the Hall sensor or resolver integrated into the motor prevents the control unit from accurately identifying the motor rotor position.
- 5Control software or calibration data fault: Internal IPB control unit software bug, corrupted calibration data, or outdated version causes incorrect determination of motor status.
- 1Use the dedicated diagnostic tool (VDS2000/3000) to read the complete fault codes and freeze frame data. Check for accompanying fault codes such as C059100 (motor voltage too low), C059500 (internal drive fault), or C003700 (pump motor fault). Record parameters such as vehicle speed and pedal travel at the time of the fault.
- 2Visually inspect the IPB electro-hydraulic module for damage, fluid leakage, or burn marks. Inspect the master cylinder connection and wiring harness connectors (especially the large 30pin connector) for looseness, water ingress, or corrosion. Measure the voltage between the power supply (Pin30) and ground (Pin31) to verify it is within 12V±0.5V.
- 3Perform the IPB function self-test: Use the diagnostic tool to actuate the brake booster motor. Listen for normal motor operation (an even running sound without binding). Observe if the brake pedal sinks automatically. Simultaneously use a current clamp to measure the motor operating current (normal value is typically 5-15A; abnormal values may exceed 25A or approach 0A).
- 4Check the brake system hydraulic circuit: Confirm the brake fluid level is normal and the lines do not leak to rule out indirect faults where excessive hydraulic resistance overloads the motor.
- 5Software check and update: Verify the IPB control unit software version against the BYD Technical Service Bulletin (TSB). If an optimized software version exists for this fault code, perform an online programming update. If necessary, perform IPB recalibration and zero-point learning.
- 6If all previous checks are normal but the fault persists, this indicates a hardware fault in the IPB internal motor or drive circuit. Replace the IPB electro-hydraulic module assembly (verify the part number against the vehicle configuration). After replacement, perform new module programming, brake system bleeding (use a diagnostic tool to execute the bleeding procedure), and ESC calibration.
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