C054300

DTC C054300 indicates an abnormal electrical signal from Pressure Sensor 2 in the IPB (Intelligent Power Brake) electro-hydraulic module, specifically a short to power, short to ground, or open circuit in the signal circuit — Qin Plus

Braking System

DTC C054300 indicates an abnormal electrical signal from Pressure Sensor 2 in the IPB (Intelligent Power Brake) electro-hydraulic module, specifically a short to power, short to ground, or open circuit in the signal circuit.

This sensor monitors brake master cylinder pressure (or wheel cylinder pressure channel 2) and provides a key input signal for ESC (Electronic Stability Control) and brake assist functions.

The ECU logs a hardware-level fault when it detects the sensor voltage signal falling outside the calibrated range (typically below 0.3V or above 4.7V, depending on the 5V reference voltage division logic).

This fault forces the IPB into a degraded mode, disabling ESC/ESP and Automatic Emergency Braking (AEB) functions.

The system may trigger limp mode (reducing brake assist).

In extreme cases, the brake pedal hardens or braking distance increases, posing a serious safety hazard.

4
Cases Logged
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Song PLUS DM-i — Stiff Brake Pedal with Multiple System Warnings

The instrument cluster displayed 'Braking System Fault' and 'Automatic Emergency Braking Function Limited'. Fault codes: C054300 and U012100 (IPB communication fault). Inspection found the IPB electro-hydraulic module at the firewall. The wiring harness retaining clip above it had detached, allowing the harness to rub against the engine heat shield edge. This wore through the insulation on pressure sensor 2's signal wire, shorting the copper core to ground. Repaired the damaged wiring (re-wrapped and fitted with corrugated sleeving), rerouted the harness to avoid contact, cleared the fault codes and performed IPB pressure sensor calibration. Fault resolved.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

BYD Han EV: ESC warning light stays on after driving through water

After driving through flooded roads during heavy rain, the dashboard ESC warning light illuminated. VDS detected C054300 (current fault). Inspection of the IPB electro-hydraulic module connector revealed obvious water inside. Water ingress caused electrolytic corrosion between pins A12 (pressure sensor 2 signal) and A13 (ground), increasing contact resistance (measured 5.6Ω). Repair: Thoroughly cleaned the connector with electronic contact cleaner, blow-dried it, applied conductive grease, and replaced the waterproof seal ring. Fault did not reappear.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Tang DM-i intermittent brake boost failure

Customer reported intermittent hard brake pedal with the warning light flickering. Scan tool showed historic fault code C054300; freeze frame data indicated brake pressure sensor 2 signal voltage was 0.02V (short to ground) when the fault occurred. Wiggling the IPB wiring harness reproduced the fault. Found pin 8 (sensor power supply) on the electro-hydraulic module connector had recessed, causing poor contact with the sensor terminal. Under vibration, this intermittently disconnected and the ECU interpreted this as a short to ground. Repair: Replaced IPB connector assembly (or repaired pin), ensuring all terminal heights are uniform. Fault resolved.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Replaced IPB assembly on Seal, fault persists

After an accident, the IPB electro-hydraulic module was replaced, but DTC C054300 would not clear. The new module carried an aftermarket part number; though externally identical, its internal pressure sensor 2 calibration parameters did not match the vehicle. Further investigation showed the technician skipped the 'post-IPB replacement online configuration' procedure, so the ECU could not recognize the new sensor's characteristic curve. Solution: Performed the 'IPB replacement' online configuration using BYD VDS, wrote the correct parameter calibration values, performed brake line bleeding and pressure sensor zero-point learning. 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.