C1206

DTC C1206 indicates the ABS control module detected an electrical integrity fault (open or short circuit) in the left rear wheel speed sensor circuit — Atto 8

Braking System

DTC C1206 indicates the ABS control module detected an electrical integrity fault (open or short circuit) in the left rear wheel speed sensor circuit.

The sensor is typically a two-wire magnetic inductive or Hall effect type.

During normal operation, it sends the ABS module either an AC voltage signal that varies with wheel speed (magnetic inductive type, amplitude increases with speed, approximately 0.1V-5V) or a square-wave digital signal (Hall effect type).

The module triggers this fault when it detects infinite resistance in the sensor wiring (open circuit), a short to ground or power, or a continuously abnormal signal voltage (below 0.5V or above 4.5V) exceeding the set threshold (typically 2-5 seconds).

This fault causes a loss of the left rear wheel speed signal, forces the ABS, EBD, ESC, TCS, and Automatic Emergency Braking (AEB) systems into a degraded mode, and limits the energy recovery system.

In extreme cases, it causes uneven brake force distribution or vehicle skidding.

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Cases Logged
BYD DTC AI Analysis

BYD E2 left rear wheel speed sensor intermittent failure after water wading

A 2020 BYD E2 with 32,000 km displayed "Check ABS System" on the instrument cluster. The scan tool retrieved current DTC C1206; freeze frame data showed the fault occurred at 15 km/h. Inspection revealed significant water ingress in the left rear wheel speed sensor connector, with the pins oxidised green. Disassembly revealed the connector seal was missing, likely not refitted during previous repair. Thoroughly cleaned the connector, installed a new waterproof seal, and applied electrical contact protectant. Fault resolved. Check chassis harness waterproofing and avoid driving through water.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

BYD Yuan EV: C1206 False Positive After Tyre Replacement

2019 BYD Yuan EV535. Owner reported ABS warning light on after left rear tyre replacement. Inspection found wheel speed sensor mounting bolt loose; gap between sensor and steering knuckle measured 2.5 mm (standard 0.3–1.0 mm). The technician had not used a torque wrench and left metal debris in the mounting hole. Cleaned the mounting face, adjusted the sensor to set 0.6 mm air gap with the tone ring, and tightened the bolt to 8–10 N·m. Fault cleared. When replacing tyres, protect the sensor from impacts that can displace the internal magnetic core.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Chassis harness wear caused left rear wheel speed signal open circuit on BYD E3

A commercial BYD E3 rideshare vehicle with 120,000 km: ABS warning light flickered intermittently on rough roads. C1206 stored as a historical code with intermittent open-circuit behavior. On the lift, found severe chafing on the left rear harness near the fuel tank bracket—copper conductors partially broken, only a few strands still connected. Repair: Cut out the damaged section, soldered and heat-shrink sealed. Re-routed and secured the harness, added anti-chafing corrugated tubing to clear sharp body edges. Road-tested one week, no recurrence.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Internal short circuit in BYD E1 left rear wheel speed sensor caused abnormal ABS pump activation.

2020 BYD E1. ABS pump activated abnormally and frequently while driving, accompanied by a clicking noise; dashboard displayed brake system fault. Read DTC C1206 (current). Measured sensor resistance at only 0.3kΩ (well below the standard 1.2kΩ), determining internal short. Replaced the OEM wheel speed sensor; new sensor measured 1.15kΩ (normal), but the fault code remained. Further inspection revealed the ABS module's corresponding pins had burned from prolonged high current caused by the short. Replaced the left rear wheel speed sensor and ABS control unit assembly. After matching and programming, the fault resolved completely. Note: Sensor shorts can damage the ABS module; perform a thorough inspection.
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.