B16E700

DTC B16E700 indicates the airbag system (SRS) detects a communication interruption or physical disconnection of the Middle Rear Impact Sensor — Seal U

Safety System

DTC B16E700 indicates the airbag system (SRS) detects a communication interruption or physical disconnection of the Middle Rear Impact Sensor.

This sensor, typically located on the inner rear bumper reinforcement or lower C-pillar, monitors rear-end collision acceleration.

A "not connected" status means the SRS control unit receives no valid signal from the sensor, typically indicating an open circuit or high-resistance condition.

The system determines the sensor circuit is open, the connector is detached, or the sensor has internal damage.

This fault causes the SRS to lose accurate rear-end collision monitoring capabilities.

It may force the airbag control unit into a degraded protection mode, disable specific airbag functions, or illuminate the airbag warning lamp continuously, severely compromising passive safety system reliability.

4
Cases Logged
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Centre rear impact sensor communication fault after water wading

A 2019 BYD Qin EV had the airbag warning light stay on after driving through floodwater in heavy rain. A diagnostic scan retrieved DTC B16E700. Technicians found water had reached the rear bumper level. After removing the rear bumper, they found obvious water stains inside the centre rear impact sensor connector – the pins were oxidised and black. Repair: cleaned the connector thoroughly with electronic contact cleaner, dried it, applied waterproof silicone grease, replaced the sensor (water-damaged internally), and wrapped the connector with waterproof tape. Once the fault was cleared, the technician advised the owner to check the rear bumper seal for deterioration.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Sensor not plugged in after accident repair triggered a warning.

After a minor rear-end collision, a BYD E2 had its rear bumper replaced at a third-party workshop. The owner then noticed the airbag warning light on the instrument panel and brought the vehicle to our shop. We found current fault code B16E700. Our inspection revealed the technician had not fully seated the center rear impact sensor harness connector during bumper installation. The connector lock did not click into place, and the plug eventually worked loose and disconnected due to vibration while driving. We reconnected the sensor plug and confirmed the locking tab engaged securely. We cleared the fault code using a diagnostic tool and ran an SRS cyclic test. This resolved the fault. We recommend standardizing the SRS self-check procedure after accident repairs.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Wiring harness aging and breakage causing intermittent fault

A 2020 BYD E3 had an intermittent airbag warning light while driving. The diagnostic tool flagged DTC B16E700. Connectors and sensor resistance were normal. Further inspection found the harness where it routes from the left C-pillar trim to the rear floor had been bent repeatedly by long-term boot opening and closing, partially breaking the internal copper strands and causing an intermittent open circuit. The fix: cut out the damaged section, spliced in same-spec wire (0.5mm² shielded twisted pair), soldered the joints, sealed with heat shrink tubing, and rerouted the harness away from sharp sheet metal edges. No faults returned during one week of post-repair monitoring.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Internally damaged sensor body replacement case

A 2019 BYD E2 lightly bumped into an obstacle while reversing. DTC B16E700 appeared right after. The sensor had no external damage, but its resistance was infinite — indicating the internal piezoelectric element cracked from the impact shock. The collision was very light, so the sensor likely had an inherent weakness or hidden prior damage. The technician replaced the sensor, cleared the fault codes, and ran the calibration procedure (activating the SRS ECU learning mode via the diagnostic tool) to set the correct collision threshold.
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.