DTC B16E8 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control unit detects an abnormally low-resistance path (short to ground) between the Center Rear Impact Sensor (typically installed on the rear panel or C-pillar area) signal circuit and body ground — Qin Plus
DTC B16E8 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control unit detects an abnormally low-resistance path (short to ground) between the Center Rear Impact Sensor (typically installed on the rear panel or C-pillar area) signal circuit and body ground.
This sensor uses a piezoelectric or capacitive accelerometer.
During normal operation, it outputs a 0.5-4.5V analog voltage signal to the SRS control unit to reflect collision acceleration.
A short to ground causes the control unit to continuously receive a voltage signal near 0V, triggering the following: 1) The system determines the sensor has failed, enters fail-safe mode, and disables the associated airbags (including side curtain airbags and rear collision protection functions); 2) During an actual rear collision, the system cannot accurately identify collision severity, causing delayed or no airbag deployment; 3) If the short-circuit resistance is unstable, it triggers an intermittent fault, causing the SRS warning lamp to illuminate erratically.
This is a hard fault.
Upon detection, the control unit stores the DTC and illuminates the instrument cluster airbag warning lamp.
SRS light on after driving through water: Aged boot seal caused water ingress into sensor
False alarm after rear-end collision repair: Rear seat bolt crushed wiring harness
New vehicle assembly defect: damaged wiring harness protective sleeve causing a short to ground
Sensor internal component aging: seal failure from high-temperature environment