C003804

This DTC indicates the ABS control unit (ESC module) detected abnormal electrical characteristics in the left rear wheel speed sensor circuit, including a signal line open circuit, short to ground, short to power, or intermittent connection — Qin Plus

Braking System

This DTC indicates the ABS control unit (ESC module) detected abnormal electrical characteristics in the left rear wheel speed sensor circuit, including a signal line open circuit, short to ground, short to power, or intermittent connection.

The ABS ECU fails to receive the square-wave speed signal from the left rear wheel, or the signal voltage falls outside the threshold range (normal static voltage approximately 11V; dynamic switching 0.5-11V).

This fault triggers the ABS fail-safe mode, disabling or limiting the anti-lock braking, electronic stability control (ESC), autonomous emergency braking (AEB), and traction control (TCS) functions, and illuminates the ABS/ESC warning lamp on the instrument cluster.

Due to the compact chassis layout and long wiring harness on pure electric models like the BYD E5, vehicle vibration rubbing the harness against sharp body edges, connector oxidation after water exposure, or poor internal contact in the power distribution box frequently cause this fault.

5
Cases Logged
BYD DTC AI Analysis

BYD F3 Sedan ABS Wiring Harness Chafed and Shorted to Ground

A BYD F3 with approximately 103,000 km developed an intermittent ABS warning light while driving. Live data showed an abnormal right rear wheel speed of 2252 km/h, though the actual fault was left rear wheel speed sensor circuit C003804. Replacing the sensor did not help. The wiring harness had continuity to earth. Inspection found a white/red wire at the bottom of the right chassis rail had chafed through and grounded against the body. Wrapping the damaged section and securing the harness to specification resolved the fault.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI Analysis

BYD Qin Pro DM body burr pierced wiring harness

BYD Qin Pro DM ESP warning light on, DTCs C003804 and U100308 stored. Replaced left and right wheel speed sensors; fault returned. Pin K08A-1 had no power, while K08B-1 had 12 V. Found a manufacturing burr under the left rear seat at the body ground point had pierced the harness, causing an intermittent short. Insulated the burr and repaired the harness. Fault resolved.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Internal damage to BYD Song MAX instrument panel power distribution box

The BYD Song MAX instrument cluster displayed "Check ESP System" and "Check ABS System" warnings with DTCs C003708 and C003804. Replaced the left rear wheel speed sensor and test drove 5 km; the fault returned. Voltage at sensor pin 2 measured only 2.789V (normal: 11V). Wiggling the K2G connector at the instrument panel distribution box caused voltage fluctuations. Internal circuit damage in the instrument panel distribution box was confirmed. Replaced the distribution box and cleared the fault.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI Analysis

BYD F3 Wheel Speed Sensor Wiring Harness Troubleshooting

The BYD F3 ABS warning light stayed on. Retrieved DTC C003804. Performed systematic diagnosis per the workshop manual, measuring the left rear wheel speed sensor supply, ground, and signal circuits. Found an internal open circuit in the sensor, plus minor oxidation from water ingress in the wiring harness connector. Cleaned the connector terminals and replaced the wheel speed sensor. Fault resolved.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI Analysis

BYD E5: Intermittent wheel speed sensor signal loss

A 2018 BYD E5 came in with the ABS light flickering intermittently while driving. The scan tool retrieved historic DTC C003804. Inspection found the left rear wheel speed sensor wiring harness retaining clip had detached where it passes through the left rear wheel arch liner, allowing the harness to chafe against the liner and causing intermittent signal loss over bumps. Re-secured the harness and wrapped the worn section. The fault has not returned.
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.