Home / DTC / C058C — Brake Booster Motor B Position Sensor Circuit Low

C058C — Brake Booster Motor B Position Sensor Circuit Low

Detailed page for trouble code C058C.

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Code

C058C

Generic C — Chassis

Brake Booster Motor B Position Sensor Circuit Low

Brand: Generic
Views: UK: 22 EN: 22 RU: 23
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Page language: EN

Causes

  • Open or shorted wiring in the brake booster motor B position sensor circuit
  • Corroded, loose, or damaged connector at the booster motor/sensor
  • Failed brake booster motor position sensor (potentiometer/Hall sensor)
  • Insufficient reference voltage or poor ground at sensor
  • Blown fuse or relay feeding the booster motor/sensor circuit
  • Internal failure in the brake booster motor/actuator assembly

Symptoms

  • Brake warning lamp, ABS or traction control lamp illuminated
  • Reduced or no power brake assist — hard brake pedal
  • Increased pedal travel and longer stopping distances
  • Stored DTC and inability to enable normal brake assist
  • Possible limp or reduced braking mode indicated by instrument cluster

What to check

  • Read and record DTCs and freeze-frame data with a scan tool; view live data for brake booster motor position
  • Verify battery voltage is within spec (12.4–14.5 V) before testing
  • Visually inspect connector at brake booster motor for corrosion, bent pins, water intrusion, or damage
  • Check related fuses and relays for continuity and proper operation
  • Backprobe the sensor connector to verify reference voltage and ground
  • Wiggle wiring harness while monitoring live data to detect intermittent faults

Signal parameters

  • Reference supply: typically 5 V (verify with manufacturer data)
  • Sensor output expected: approx. 0.5–4.5 V (depending on position) — low-level fault when below expected lower threshold (manufacturer-specific)
  • Ground: near 0.0–0.2 V reference at sensor ground pin
  • Resistance: position potentiometer style sensors commonly 1 kΩ–20 kΩ (check OEM spec)
  • Signal behavior: smooth, continuous change with actuator movement; no open circuit or stuck low

Diagnostic algorithm

  1. Connect scan tool, record DTCs and live data for brake booster motor position. Note stored freeze-frame conditions.
  2. Verify battery voltage and charge if low. Low system voltage can cause false low-signal DTCs.
  3. Inspect all connectors, harness sections, and mounting of the brake booster motor assembly for damage or corrosion. Repair as needed.
  4. Check related fuses and relays. Replace any blown fuses and retest.
  5. Backprobe the sensor connector with ignition ON (engine off). Measure reference voltage, sensor output, and ground using a multimeter. Compare to expected signal parameters.
  6. Operate booster motor (with scan tool command or by cycling brake system where applicable) and observe sensor output for smooth change. A stuck or constant low reading indicates sensor or internal fault.
  7. Perform continuity and resistance checks on wiring between the sensor connector and ABS/ECM connector. Repair open/shorts.
  8. If wiring and power/ground are good but signal remains low, remove and bench-test or replace the brake booster motor/position sensor assembly per manufacturer procedure.
  9. After repair, clear codes and perform road test or commanded tests to confirm correct operation and absence of DTC.

Likely causes

  • Damaged connector or corroded pins at the brake booster motor
  • Broken or shorted wiring between booster motor sensor and control module
  • Failed position sensor inside the electric booster motor assembly
  • Blown fuse or missing reference voltage to the sensor
  • Poor sensor ground connection

Fault status

⚠️ Status
Brake Booster Motor B Position Sensor Circuit Low — sensor output below acceptable range or missing signal; control module has limited or no position feedback.
🟡 Repair difficulty: Medium
⏱️ Diagnostic time: 0.5-2.0 hours

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