DTC C1102 indicates the ABS (Anti-lock Braking System) electronic control unit (ECU) detects an operating voltage below the minimum system-calibrated threshold (typically 9V-10 — Qin Plus
DTC C1102 indicates the ABS (Anti-lock Braking System) electronic control unit (ECU) detects an operating voltage below the minimum system-calibrated threshold (typically 9V-10.5V, depending on vehicle calibration).
This fault indicates an abnormal power supply to the ABS hydraulic modulator assembly, potentially causing active safety systems including ABS, ESP (Electronic Stability Program), EBD (Electronic Brakeforce Distribution), and Automatic Emergency Braking (AEB) to enter a degraded mode or fail completely.
In BYD new energy vehicles, this fault typically results from a discharged 12V low-voltage battery, excessive voltage drop in the power supply circuit, high ground circuit resistance, or an internal ABS ECU power management module failure.
This critical fault compromises driving safety and requires immediate repair.
- 112V low-voltage battery aging, low charge, or degraded performance (SOC below 30% or SOH below 80%, static voltage below 12.4V)
- 2Loose connection, oxidation, or corrosion in the ABS hydraulic modulator assembly power supply circuit, or a blown or poorly seated ABS fuse (usually 30A/40A/60A) in the front compartment power distribution box.
- 3Loose, oxidized, or paint-covered ABS ECU ground points causing increased ground resistance (common ground points: G101 left front side member, G102 firewall)
- 4Abnormal output voltage from the DC-DC converter (NEV) or alternator (ICE vehicle), causing the 12V system voltage to drop below 13.5V or fluctuate excessively.
- 5Internal power management module fault in the ABS hydraulic modulator with ECU (e.g., damaged voltage regulator chip, failed filter capacitor, or internal short circuit)
- 1Basic power supply check: Measure the 12V battery static voltage (should be ≥12.4V) and dynamic voltage (should be ≥13.5V after starting the engine or entering READY mode). Check the battery terminals and ABS fuses (FB-02 or ABS1/ABS2) for oxidation and verify a tightening torque of 8-10N·m.
- 2ABS module power supply check: Turn ignition switch to ON. Measure voltage between the ABS module power supply pin (e.g., B04-1/25) and body ground using a multimeter. If below 10V, measure the power supply harness voltage drop in sections (battery positive terminal → front compartment power distribution box → ABS module connector).
- 3Ground circuit check: Measure the resistance between the ABS module ground pins (e.g., B04-13/38) and the main body ground point. Resistance must be less than 0.1Ω. Check and clean the dedicated ABS ground points G101/G102 on the left front longitudinal beam or firewall. Verify the points are free of oxidation, paint, or looseness.
- 4Dynamic load test: Start the vehicle. Turn on high-power loads such as headlights, air conditioning, and defroster. Use the diagnostic tool to read 'System Voltage' in the ABS data stream. Verify the voltage is within the normal 9V-16V range. If the voltage drops significantly under load, check the DC-DC output stability.
- 5Module self-check and replacement: Clear the fault code and perform a road test, including braking at different vehicle speeds. If C1102 reappears, replace the ABS hydraulic modulator assembly with ECU. After replacement, use VDS to perform yaw rate sensor calibration, G-sensor calibration, and brake line bleeding.
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