B1698

DTC B1698 indicates the airbag system electronic control unit (ACU/SRS ECU) detects an internal system fault or critical function failure — Seal U

Safety System

DTC B1698 indicates the airbag system electronic control unit (ACU/SRS ECU) detects an internal system fault or critical function failure.

This fault involves an ECU internal processor self-check anomaly, memory data checksum error, power supply monitoring circuit fault, firing circuit diagnostic system anomaly, or interrupted communication with the vehicle CAN network.

As the core control module of the passive safety system, the SRS ECU monitors crash sensor signals in real time and controls the firing circuits for multiple airbags and seat belt pretensioners.

When B1698 triggers, the system typically enters fail-safe mode and automatically disables all airbag and pretensioner deployment.

This causes a complete loss of vehicle crash protection capability and poses a severe safety hazard.

4
Cases Logged
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Internal corrosion in SRS ECU due to water wading

Model: 2020 Song MAX 1.5T. Symptoms: After driving through heavy rain and floodwater, the instrument cluster displayed ‘Please check airbag system’. VDS read DTC B1698 (current and cannot clear). Diagnosis: Removed and inspected the ACU under the centre console. Found clear water staining and copper corrosion inside the connector, and the ECU housing seal had deteriorated. ACU power supply measured normal, but CAN bus voltage showed abnormal fluctuation. Repair: Replaced the ACU with a new assembly. Cleaned the harness connector terminals with electronic cleaner, applied conductive grease, and re-wrapped for waterproofing. After replacement, ran online programming and system self-test. Fault fixed.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Poor ground connection after accident repair caused the fault.

Vehicle: 2019 Yuan EV535. Symptom: SRS warning light remained illuminated after front collision repairs, and the system stored DTC B1698. Diagnosis: Checked ACU supply voltage at 12.4V (normal), but measured 8.5Ω resistance between the GND pin and body ground (abnormal). Inspection revealed that during accident repairs, the technician failed to properly reinstall the ACU ground wire after removing the centre console. Damaged threads on the ground bolt caused a poor connection. Repair: Retapped the ground stud and installed the ground wire using a new M6 bolt with serrated washer. Ground resistance dropped to 0.3Ω. Cleared DTCs, and the system returned to normal.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Prolonged battery drain caused ECU initialization failure

Model: 2021 Tang DM 2.0T. Symptom: Vehicle left unused for three months drained the battery. After a jump start, the SRS warning light came on. Codes B1698 and historical U0151 were retrieved. Diagnosis: Battery voltage measured only 8.2V, with severe fluctuations during the jump start (voltage spiked between 9–15V). Inspection found the ACU repeatedly failed to initialise under low voltage, logging internal fault codes. Repair: Fitted a new battery, used a regulated power supply to maintain 13.5V, cleared all DTCs, and performed the ACU restart sequence (power disconnected for over 10 minutes). The fault has not returned.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Aftermarket modification caused CAN bus interference fault

Vehicle: 2020 Qin Pro DM. Symptoms: After installing a large-screen aftermarket navigation system, the SRS system intermittently set DTC B1698; the fault appeared sporadically. Diagnosis: Checked ACU power and ground – normal. The CAN bus waveform showed significant noise. Inspection found the installer damaged the original SRS CAN harness shielding when pulling wires and did not twist the wires, causing interference from the audio amplifier’s high current. Repair: Repaired the damaged CAN wiring, restored the twisted-pair configuration (33–35 twists per metre), rewrapped the harness with aluminium foil shielding, grounded the shield at one end, and routed the harness away from the audio power cables. After the repair, the CAN waveform returned to normal and the 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.