B1677

DTC B1677 indicates a short to ground in the left rear side impact sensor (SIS) signal circuit — Seal 6 EV

Safety System

DTC B1677 indicates a short to ground in the left rear side impact sensor (SIS) signal circuit.

In the BYD SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) architecture, the left rear side impact sensor typically mounts below the B-pillar or near the left rear door frame to monitor collision acceleration at the left rear of the vehicle.

When the sensor signal wire shorts to the vehicle body ground, the SRS control module (ACM) detects a signal voltage continuously below the threshold (usually <0.5V) and logs a short-to-ground fault.

This fault disables the left rear side collision detection function, forces the system into fail-safe mode, and illuminates the instrument cluster SRS warning lamp.

During a side collision, the left-side curtain airbag and seat side airbag may fail to deploy, posing a serious safety risk.

4
Cases Logged
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Song MAX B1677 fault after wading

A 2019 BYD Song MAX owner reported that the airbag warning light stayed on after driving through water. The technician used the VDS to read fault codes and found DTC B1677 (active). Removing and inspecting the left rear side impact sensor (located below the left C-pillar) revealed water stains and green copper corrosion inside the connector. The water level had exceeded the door sill seal during the crossing, allowing water to enter the connector through the wiring harness waterproof boot. The technician cleaned the connector pins with anhydrous alcohol, applied silicone-based conductive grease, replaced the waterproof sealing ring, and re-secured the wiring harness waterproof boot. After clearing the fault code, the SRS light went out and the data stream showed the sensor voltage returned to normal (2.3V).
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Tang DM wiring harness chafing after accident repair

2021 Tang DM. DTC B1677 appeared one month after left rear accident repair. The inspection found mechanics had replaced the left rear wing during the accident repair, but had not installed the wiring harness retaining clips to standard. This allowed the impact sensor wiring harness (B-pillar to floor section) to chafe against the metal edge of the seat rail. Damaged insulation caused a short to earth. Repair: Repaired the damaged harness (3 wires, including the signal wire shorted to earth). Wrapped the harness in corrugated tubing, re-routed and secured it to specification. Fitted a rubber grommet to isolate the metal edge. Replaced the impact sensor (the short circuit may have damaged the internal protection diode).
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Internal short circuit in Yuan EV sensor

2019 BYD Yuan EV535, 80,000 km. Intermittent B1677 fault code (alternating between current and historic). Fault not present during inspection. Measured harness-to-ground resistance: normal. Monitored sensor signal line with oscilloscope; detected occasional 0V pull-down. Diagnosed as intermittent short-to-ground inside the sensor (MEMS chip or filter capacitor). Replaced left rear side impact sensor (Part No.: BYD-3636400-XXX). When installing, make sure the arrow mark on the sensor points toward the front of the vehicle. After replacement, monitored continuously for one week — fault did not reoccur.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Seatbelt pretensioner incorrectly connected on Qin Pro, causing short circuit

2020 BYD Qin (petrol). When retrofitting rear seat heaters, the modification shop mistakenly connected the left rear side impact sensor connector (white 2-pin) to the power tap wire near the seatbelt pretensioner connector (yellow 2-pin). This shorted the sensor power wire to ground, triggering DTC B1677, accompanied by DTC B1680 (seatbelt pretensioner fault). Resolution: Removed the improperly modified wiring harness, repaired the factory wiring harness insulation, and restored the original vehicle circuit. Reset the SRS control module coding, cleared the fault codes, and the system returned to normal.
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.