B1654

DTC B1654 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) ECU detected a communication interruption or abnormal circuit impedance between the Left Front Impact Sensor and the main controller during self-check or operation — Seal 6 EV

Safety System

DTC B1654 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) ECU detected a communication interruption or abnormal circuit impedance between the Left Front Impact Sensor and the main controller during self-check or operation.

This sensor typically mounts to the left front longitudinal beam, headlamp bracket, or fender reinforcement beam to monitor collision acceleration on the left front side of the vehicle.

The ECU sets this DTC if it fails to receive a valid signal from the sensor within a predetermined time, or if it detects an open or short circuit in the wiring.

Under this condition, the airbag system enters fail-safe mode, potentially disabling the left front collision detection function.

This compromises the deployment logic of the airbags and seatbelt pretensioners during a frontal collision, posing a major safety risk.

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

Wiring harness not plugged in after accident repair caused B1654.

Model: BYD Tang DM 2021. Symptom: After repairs following a minor front-end collision, the airbag warning light on the instrument panel stayed on. Diagnosis: Retrieved DTC B1654 (active fault). Inspection revealed that after panel beating repairs to the left front rail, the technician failed to reconnect the left front impact sensor harness connector, leaving the wiring harness dangling inside the fender liner. Resolution: Reconnected the sensor connector, applied conductive paste, and secured the harness with cable ties to prevent chafing against the bodywork. Cleared the fault code and the system returned to normal.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Corroded sensor connector on water-damaged vehicle

Vehicle: BYD Yuan EV 2019. Symptom: Airbag warning light illuminated after driving through floodwater during heavy rain. Diagnosis: VDS scan reported DTC B1654. Removed the left front impact sensor and found obvious water ingress inside the connector. The pins showed green copper corrosion, causing increased contact resistance on the signal line (measured 15 Ω; normal < 1 Ω). Solution: Replaced the wiring harness connector (cut and splice), cleaned and polished the sensor pins, and applied silicone grease to the connector seal to improve waterproofing. Fault resolved.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Rodents chewed through the wiring, causing an intermittent fault.

Vehicle: 2019 BYD Song MAX. Symptoms: SRS warning light illuminates intermittently, particularly on rough roads. Diagnosis: DTC B1654: intermittent historical fault. Inspected the left front impact sensor wiring harness and found rodent damage inside the corrugated tubing. The signal wire conductor had partially fractured, with only a few copper strands maintaining the connection. Vehicle vibration caused the circuit to open, triggering the fault. Repair: Repaired the harness by soldering the broken conductor and sealing it with heat-shrink tubing. Installed rodent mesh and rerouted the harness away from rodent-prone areas. This completely resolved the fault.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Internal open circuit in sensor body

Vehicle: 2020 BYD Qin Pro (petrol). Symptom: Airbag warning light suddenly illuminated; no accident history. Diagnosis: DTC B1654 active. Measured sensor harness continuity and insulation – both normal. Connector voltage normal (12V or 5V reference). Removed sensor and measured infinite resistance (spec: approx. 2.5 kΩ). Repair: Replaced the OEM left front impact sensor (part number must match vehicle VIN). Torqued mounting bolt to 9 N·m. Performed system configuration (some models require sensor ID programming via diagnostic tool). Fault cleared.
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.