B167711

B167711 is a BYD Supplemental Restraint System (SRS) diagnostic code indicating a short to ground in the left rear side impact sensor signal circuit — Seal U

Safety System

B167711 is a BYD Supplemental Restraint System (SRS) diagnostic code indicating a short to ground in the left rear side impact sensor signal circuit.

This sensor typically mounts in the left B-pillar or C-pillar area.

It detects acceleration changes during a side impact and provides a collision severity signal to the Airbag Control Unit (ACU).

A short to ground indicates insulation failure between the sensor signal wire (SIG) or power wire (VB) and the vehicle body ground (GND), dropping the resistance below the normal threshold (typically <5Ω).

This fault prevents the ACU from receiving the collision signal, triggers the system fail-safe mechanism, disables deployment of the left rear side airbag and side curtain airbag, and illuminates the airbag warning light.

During a severe collision, the affected airbags may fail to inflate, posing a severe safety hazard.

5
Cases Logged
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

BYD Tang DM-i seat memory function inoperative

Symptoms: While driving, the instrument cluster suddenly displayed 'Seat System Fault'. The driver's seat memory function failed completely—could not save or recall seat positions. After switching off and restarting, the fault code remained, though manual seat adjustment worked normally. Diagnosis: Connected the VDS2000 scan tool and retrieved code B167711 (Driver Seat Position Sensor Circuit Range/Performance). Inspected the wiring harness connector under the seat and found slight internal oxidation. Measured the seat position sensor resistance; it fluctuated between 2.5kΩ and 3.1kΩ (should be stable at 2.8kΩ ±0.2kΩ). Checked the seat memory module supply voltage: 13.8V, normal. CAN bus communication waveform was normal. Resolution: Replaced the driver's seat horizontal position sensor (Part No. F3-6826300). Ran the 'Seat Position Calibration' routine using the scan tool. Cleared the fault code and test drove the vehicle; seat memory function returned to normal.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

BYD Han EV Founding Edition: Automatic seat adjustment malfunction

**Symptoms:** When using the comfort entry function, the seat suddenly jammed while automatically retracting, and the instrument cluster displayed 'Check Seat System'. The vehicle drove normally, but the seat position memory failed, returning the seat to the fully forward position every time the owner entered the vehicle. **Diagnosis:** Connected a diagnostic scanner and retrieved DTC B167711, stored as three historic faults. Removed the seat for inspection and found traces of spilled drink inside the seat rails with corrosion on the position sensor connector. Measured the sensor supply voltage at 5V (normal), but the signal wire voltage fluctuated between 0.3V and 2.8V (should show linear progression). Inspected the Seat Control Module (SCM) and found signs of water ingress internally. **Resolution:** Thoroughly cleaned the seat rails and wiring harness connectors, treated the connector pins with WD-40 Specialist Electrical Contact Cleaner, and replaced the seat position sensor. Dried out the Seat Control Module and applied waterproof sealing. Fault resolved.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

BYD Song Pro DM seat memory module communication fault

After the vehicle sat overnight, the driver's seat automatically moved to the rearmost position upon startup the next morning. The memory buttons could not return the seat. The multimedia system displayed an abnormal seat position icon and the warning light illuminated. Diagnosis: Connected the BYD dedicated diagnostic tool and retrieved DTCs B167711 (seat position sensor signal invalid) and U024687 (lost communication with seat memory module). Inspected the seat memory module (located beneath the seat) power supply fuse and found poor contact at F2/14. Reseating the fuse restored communication, but B167711 remained. Further inspection revealed the seat position sensor wiring harness had chafed through at the seat rail, intermittently shorting to earth. Resolution: Repaired the damaged wiring harness (re-wrapped with insulation tape and protected with corrugated tubing), replaced the fuse, and performed the 'seat system self-learning' procedure using the diagnostic tool. Advised the owner to avoid placing hard objects under the seat to prevent harness damage.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

BYD Qin Plus DM-i seat position signal drift

Symptoms: While driving, the instrument cluster occasionally displayed a 'Seat Position Abnormal' warning that cleared quickly. This later developed into erratic seat memory function, with saved positions deviating significantly from actual positions (approximately 5cm fore-aft deviation when recalled after saving). Diagnosis: Retrieved DTC B167711 as a historical fault with no current faults present. Observed live data and found seat fore-aft position sensor values fluctuating randomly between 128-135 (should vary linearly with seat movement). Inspected the sensor mounting bracket and found the fixing screws loose with excessive clearance between the sensor and rack. Measured sensor operating voltage and detected 0.3V ripple interference on the 5V reference. Resolution: Retightened the seat position sensor fixing screws and adjusted the sensor-to-rack clearance to 0.5-1.0mm. Fitted a ferrite core to the sensor signal line to suppress interference, cleared the adaptive values, and recalibrated the seat position. This completely resolved the fault.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

BYD Tang EV seat memory module software fault

Symptoms: Three months after purchasing the new vehicle, the seat memory function developed an intermittent fault, occasionally accompanied by DTC B167711. The fault mostly occurred after the vehicle had been parked for extended periods (over 8 hours), and may clear itself after driving for a while. Diagnosis: Connected VDS and retrieved DTC B167711, but could not clear it. Inspected the seat position sensor and associated wiring harnesses; found no physical damage. Checked the seat memory module (SMJ) software version and found V1.02. Cross-referenced with the service bulletin and confirmed a software bug. Monitored the seat position sensor data stream and found the sensor failed to initialise after the vehicle woke from sleep mode. Resolution: Upgraded the seat memory module software to version V1.05. After the upgrade, performed a 'full seat system calibration' (including: learning the limit positions for horizontal travel, height adjustment, backrest angle, and cushion angle). Monitored the vehicle for one week following the upgrade; the fault has not reoccurred.
Original source ↗
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.