B167300

This fault code indicates a communication failure between the airbag control module (SRS ECU) and the right side impact sensor (SIS) — Seal 6 EV

Safety System

This fault code indicates a communication failure between the airbag control module (SRS ECU) and the right side impact sensor (SIS).

On models such as the BYD Qin PRO, the right side impact sensor typically mounts inside the right front door trim panel, below the right B-pillar, or beside the right front seat.

The sensor connects to the SRS ECU via a LIN bus or hardwire to monitor real-time lateral acceleration changes on the right side of the vehicle.

The ECU triggers DTC B167300 if it fails to receive valid data frames from the sensor over several consecutive ignition cycles, detects a bus short or open circuit, or encounters a data checksum failure.

This fault may prevent the right side airbags (curtain and seat side airbags) from deploying during a side impact.

Consequently, the airbag warning lamp (SRS lamp) illuminates continuously, and the vehicle passive safety system enters degraded protection mode.

4
Cases Logged
5
Causes
  • 1Internal circuit damage in the right side impact sensor (e.g., MEMS accelerometer chip failure or internal capacitor breakdown), common after vehicle water ingress or a previous side impact.
  • 2Loose connection, backed-out terminals, oxidation, or water ingress at the wiring harness connector between the sensor and the SRS ECU, particularly harness wear at the door hinge or inside the sill trim caused by frequent door operation or driving through water.
  • 3Poor contact in the sensor power supply circuit (+B power) or ground circuit (GND) causing abnormal voltage (normal range is 9-16 V; voltages below 8 V can trigger a communication fault).
  • 4Faulty SRS ECU internal communication interface driver chip or outdated software version (early Qin PRO models required SRS software updates), preventing correct sensor data parsing.
  • 5Accidental damage to the sensor wiring harness during vehicle modification or repair work (such as applying window tint, routing dash cam wiring, or replacing the door trim panel) causes a hidden open or short circuit.
  • 1
    Use the BYD VDS2000 dedicated diagnostic tool or Launch X-431 to access the SRS system. Read the complete DTC freeze frame data (record vehicle speed, temperature, and voltage when the fault occurred). Clear the fault codes to determine if the fault is intermittent or persistent.
  • 2
    Visually inspect the right front door trim panel, lower B-pillar trim panel, and sill wiring harness sleeve. Closely inspect the wiring harness at the door hinge for breaks, wear, or signs of water ingress. Check the right front carpet and under the seat for water stains to determine if the vehicle is flooded.
  • 3
    Disconnect the battery negative terminal and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS capacitor. Remove the right-side impact sensor (located in the door or B-pillar; refer to the model-specific workshop manual). Inspect the connector terminals for backed-out pins, oxidation, or whitening from water ingress. Measure the voltage between pin 1 (power supply) and pin 2 (earth); this should equal battery voltage. Measure the voltage at pin 3 (LIN line) to earth; this should be 8-11 V.
  • 4
    Disconnect the SRS ECU connector (located under the center console or central tunnel). Use a multimeter to measure the continuity of the LIN wire, power wire, and ground wire between the ECU and the sensor (must be less than 1 Ω). Measure the insulation to ground and power (must be greater than 10 MΩ) to eliminate open or short circuit faults in the wiring harness.
  • 5
    If the wiring harness tests normal, use an oscilloscope to measure the LIN bus waveform (normally a square wave signal with a 0V dominant level, a 12V recessive level, and a typical baud rate of 19.2kbps). If the waveform is abnormal, replace the sensor. If the waveform is normal but the ECU still reports a fault, replace the SRS ECU.
  • 6
    After installing a new sensor or repairing the wiring harness, reconnect all connectors and connect the battery. Use the diagnostic tool to perform 'SRS System Configuration' or 'Sensor Calibration' (required on some models). Clear the fault code, then perform a system self-check to confirm B167300 does not reappear.
  • 7
    Verify the right side impact sensor function: Use the diagnostic tool to read the data stream. Moderately tap the vehicle body near the sensor mounting position by hand and observe if the 'Right Side Acceleration' value changes with the tapping (the value should fluctuate noticeably). Confirm the system has returned to normal.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Qin Pro DM: Water ingress into right front sill after wading caused sensor corrosion

A 2019 Qin Pro DM presented with the airbag warning light constantly illuminated. VDS retrieved DTCs B167300 (right side impact sensor communication error) and U0151 (lost communication with SRS). Inspection revealed the vehicle had water ingress, with water pooling inside the right front sill trim. Removing the right front seat and B-pillar lower trim exposed severely oxidised, white connector pins on the side impact sensor. Removed the water, cleaned the connector with electronic cleaner, applied conductive grease, and replaced the right side impact sensor (part number: BYD-3636400). The sensor had water ingress, likely damaging its internal circuit. After replacement, the fault cleared, the SRS light went out, and the data stream returned to normal.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Worn right front door wiring harness causes intermittent communication fault on Qin PRO petrol version

2018 BYD Qin Pro petrol. Airbag warning light intermittently illuminated, particularly when driving over speed bumps. Scan tool showed B167300 as a historical fault. Inspected wiring harness at right front door hinge area and found harness sheath cracked from repeated door opening and closing. Internal LIN signal wire copper strands had fractured with only a few strands remaining connected, causing intermittent open circuit. Repair: cut out damaged harness section, re-soldered wires, and applied waterproof insulation. Adjusted harness routing to avoid chafing against door metal edge and fitted protective corrugated conduit. Road tested 50 km after repair; fault did not return.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Door speaker modification caused the sensor connector to come loose.

A 2019 Qin Pro DM developed an illuminated airbag warning light after the owner modified the right front door speaker. The fault code B167300 was read. Inspection found that the person who did the modification had not properly reconnected the side impact sensor connector (mounted inside the door trim panel) during removal and refitting of the right front door trim panel. The plug was not fully locked, causing intermittent contact from vehicle vibration. The technician firmly reconnected the sensor connector, ensured the lock tab fully engaged, secured the wiring harness with cable ties to prevent movement, and cleared the fault code. The system returned to normal afterward.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

After accident repair, unconfigured sensors cause communication error in Qin Pro EV.

2020 BYD Qin Pro EV. After a right-side side impact collision, a workshop replaced the right front door and side impact sensor. The airbag warning light stayed on, logging DTC B167300. Inspection found the replacement sensor was an aftermarket part and the new sensor configuration had not been performed using BYD VDS. Qin Pro vehicles require online configuration after SRS component replacement; otherwise the ECU cannot recognise the new sensor ID code. Solution: Used a genuine VDS2000 diagnostic tool to access ‘SRS System – Special Functions – Configuration/Coding’, ran the right side impact sensor configuration, then cleared the DTCs. SRS self-test passed.
Data confidence: Official This information is for reference only. Always consult a qualified technician for diagnosis and repair. Do not attempt high-voltage system repairs yourself. Sources: [1]