B16BF

DTC B16BF indicates an internal fault in the airbag electronic control unit (SRS ECU) or a system-level functional failure — Atto 8

Safety System

DTC B16BF indicates an internal fault in the airbag electronic control unit (SRS ECU) or a system-level functional failure.

This fault involves an ECU internal processor self-check anomaly, memory checksum failure, power management module fault, or CAN communication interface fault.

The SRS ECU continuously monitors the internal operating voltage (3.3V/5V regulated output), EEPROM data integrity, watchdog timer status, and communication quality with the vehicle CAN network.

The system sets this DTC when the ECU detects an internal circuit fault, supply voltage outside the 9-16V range, excessive ground resistance (>1Ω), or CAN signal distortion.

This safety-critical fault may cause complete airbag system failure (airbags fail to deploy during a collision), unintended deployment, or seat belt pretensioner failure.

5
Cases Logged
BYD DTC AI Analysis

BYD Tang DM-i Intermittent SRS ECU Reset Fault

The instrument cluster intermittently displayed 'Check SRS System' with intermittent fault code B16BF. Technicians found the G101 ground point below the left A-pillar had a loose mounting bolt and an oxidised contact surface. After servicing the ground point, the fault remained. Further measurements revealed a poor connection in the power supply harness between the instrument panel distribution box and the SRS ECU near the steering column; voltage fluctuated between 8–12V when the harness was moved. Repairing the harness connector eliminated the fault. This case shows that unstable power supply is a common cause of B16BF.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

BYD Yuan EV SRS ECU internal memory damaged

Customer reported the airbag warning light staying on. Scan tool showed code B16BF, which could not be cleared. Power supply, ground, and CAN bus all normal. A software refresh attempt displayed 'ECU not responding' on the scan tool. Removed the SRS ECU (located beneath the gear selector) and found electrolytic capacitor leakage on the circuit board that had corroded the solder joints of a nearby EEPROM chip. Installed a new SRS ECU, then performed online configuration and impact sensor calibration (using VDS2000, selecting 'Yuan EV' model menu). Fault resolved.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

CAN bus interference in BYD Qin Pro DM caused B16BF

After a minor collision, the front bumper was replaced. Fault code B16BF then appeared. We found the front impact sensor wiring harness had been pinched during installation, causing an intermittent short between the CAN-H line and the body. Although the sensor itself was not faulty, the surge voltage from the short circuit triggered a protective lockout of the SRS ECU communication interface. We repaired the wiring harness insulation, cleared the code, and the system returned to normal. This case shows the need to check wiring harness integrity after collision repairs.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

BYD Song MAX software version defect

Early model Song MAX vehicles (2019 MY) built before the batch recall exhibited B16BF faults. A BYD technical bulletin confirmed this as an ECU software bug: during cold starts below -10°C, a timing error in the ECU self-diagnostic routine caused false fault reports. The fix: flash the ECU to the latest software using VDS2000 (version suffix must be greater than V2.3.1), then perform sensor recalibration. Three months of monitoring after the flash showed no further faults.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

SRS fault caused by aftermarket modification to BYD Han EV

During installation of a 360-degree surround view camera system, the installer mistakenly connected the reversing light power wire to the SRS ECU IGN power supply line, causing ECU supply voltage fluctuations. This triggered DTC B16BF and multiple sensor communication faults. Inspection found the modified wiring had damaged the original harness insulation, and the SRS ECU fuse holder was burned. Repaired the original harness, removed the unauthorised wiring, and replaced the fuse holder and SRS ECU (overvoltage had damaged the internal voltage regulator module). Fault resolved.
Data confidence: Community This information is for reference only. Always consult a qualified technician for diagnosis and repair. Do not attempt high-voltage system repairs yourself.