DTC B1655-00 indicates the airbag control unit (SRS ECU) detects an abnormally low-resistance path (typically <10Ω) between the left front impact sensor (FIS) signal circuit and body ground — Atto 8
DTC B1655-00 indicates the airbag control unit (SRS ECU) detects an abnormally low-resistance path (typically <10Ω) between the left front impact sensor (FIS) signal circuit and body ground.
In the BYD SRS architecture, this sensor is typically a piezoelectric acceleration sensor.
It communicates with the SRS ECU via a shielded twisted-pair wire and operates on a 2.5V reference bias voltage.
A short to ground causes the ECU to continuously receive a 0V low-level signal, potentially causing the following: 1) the system misinterprets the condition as a sensor fault, enters fail-safe mode, and disables airbag deployment; 2) in extreme cases, intermittent changes in short-circuit resistance may cause unintended airbag deployment.
This is a hard-wire fault, not a communication fault.
It directly affects the trigger logic for the driver front airbag and seat belt pretensioner.
Left front impact sensor connector shorted after wading
Chafed wiring harness causing hidden short circuit after accident repair
Internal sensor circuit breakdown caused a hard short.