What it means
U0186 is a generic network DTC (second digit 0) that means one or more controllers stopped receiving required CAN messages from the audio amplifier module (often called Amplifier “A”, Audio DSP/AMP, or AACM-A). The amp typically lives on a body network—for example Ford MS-CAN (~125 kbps, two-wire) or GM Low-Speed GMLAN (~33.3 kbps, single-wire, SAE J2411)—and exchanges data with the radio/ACM, display (FDIM/APIM), BCM/gateway, and sometimes the IPC. On some GM platforms the audio stack uses MOST fiber for audio streaming, but diagnostic communication and supervision still occur over GMLAN/CAN; GM service info explicitly lists U0186 = loss of communication with amplifier and instructs network checks before parts. OBD-Codes.com+2RepairPal.com+2
Typical symptoms
- No audio from any source; chimes/turn-signal clicks missing; volume/steering-wheel audio buttons inoperative
- Radio works visually but is muted or intermittently drops out
- Global scan shows U0186 stored in peer modules (ACM/radio, FDIM/APIM, BCM/IPC); the amplifier appears offline on the topology map
- After programming or low-voltage events: U0186 may set and clear intermittently as the amp fails to wake/respond. NHTSA+1
Why it sets (representative OEM logic)
- Message timeout from the amplifier. A peer (often radio/ACM or display) does not receive required status frames from the amplifier for a calibrated time, so it sets U0186. (FCA/Chrysler and Jeep service charts label U0186 “LOST COMMUNICATION WITH AUDIO AMPLIFIER” with monitoring IGN ON and battery within 10–16 V.) Charm+1
- Network/physical-layer faults on the body bus: opens/shorts, poor grounds/low voltage, or a node entering error-passive / bus-off prevent the amp’s frames from reaching peers. For two-wire CAN segments, backbones use two 120-Ω terminators (~60 Ω total); for single-wire GMLAN, expect 0–5 V signaling and distributed termination (no “60-Ω pair” at DLC). RepairPal.com
- Platform nuance (GM): Audio features may ride MOST, but U0186 is still a CAN/GMLAN communication loss with the amp; GM instructs checking GMLAN communication and power/ground to the suspect module before replacement. NHTSA
Common root causes
- Power/ground loss at the amplifier (blown fuse, poor ground eyelet, low system voltage)
- Body-network wiring faults (open/short, poor pin tension/corrosion) between ACM/BCM ↔ amplifier
- Gateway/body-bus faults (MS-CAN pair integrity, or single-wire GMLAN splice-pack/star-point issues)
- Amplifier internal/transceiver failure or software state (amp stuck/not waking after programming)
- Aftermarket audio add-ons (amp-PRO interfaces, added amps, audio harness mods) disturbing CAN lines or OEM wake/AMP-ON logic
- Water intrusion/connector damage behind the IP/console, kick panels, or cargo-area amp location. NHTSA+2NHTSA+2
Professional diagnostics (step-by-step)
Network overview & scan strategy
- Run a global scan and review the topology/gateway map. Note who set U0186 (often ACM/FDIM/APIM/BCM) and whether the amplifier communicates at all. If other body nodes are healthy and only the amp is missing, start at the amp’s power/grounds and local branch. Charm
Power/ground checks at the amplifier
- At the amp connector, load-test B+, IGN, and grounds (target ground drop ≤100–200 mV). FCA guidance for “no audio” with U0186-00 specifically points to a non-communicating amp on the bus—verify feeds before network work. NHTSA
Bus integrity — match the physical layer
- Ford MS-CAN (two-wire, ~125 kbps): At the proper MS-CAN access point (often not DLC), key-off expect ~60 Ω total; key-on at rest, ~2.5 V common-mode with small opposite deviations on H/L. Use Ford lost-comms pinpoint tests (lists U0184/U0197 alongside) as the diagnostic style for body audio nodes. Charm
- GM Low-Speed GMLAN (single-wire, ~33.3 kbps): Don’t expect a “60-Ω pair.” Check for clean 0–5 V pulses and isolate at splice-packs/star points to find a noisy/shorted node. GM’s PI1149A instructs: (1) pull all codes, (2) diagnose module-specific comm codes first (e.g., U0184 radio, U0186 amp), (3) verify GMLAN on all MOST ECUs, then powers/grounds/data lines before replacing anything. NHTSA
Segment isolation
- Depower/unplug branches (radio, amp, telematics) or pull fuses one at a time while monitoring when comms and audio return. If removing the amp restores network stability, focus on its feed/ground and transceiver. (GM and FCA service docs both point to structured isolation for audio comm faults.) NHTSA+1
Connector/terminal & harness inspection (center stack/amp location first)
- Perform pin-drag tests; inspect for pushed-out/bent pins, corrosion/water, and aftermarket splices (PAC/amp interfaces). Repair/repin; restore twist or single-wire routing as appropriate. Ford guidance for audio modules emphasizes thorough connector inspection when audio is dead. Ford Edge Forum
Aftermarket device audit
- Temporarily remove amp add-ons/line-level interfaces/trackers/DLC dongles. Practitioner reports show U0186 commonly follows aftermarket audio work until CAN and wake lines are restored to spec. JL Wrangler Forums
Software/programming notes (GM example)
- If the radio/amp was recently programmed, power-cycle and complete SPS updates; GM notes U0184/U0186 may persist until programming is finalized and modules resume normal communication. NHTSA
Module actions (only after bus integrity is proven)
- Apply software updates where applicable; then replace/initialize the amplifier per OEM procedures only after wiring/termination/power are conclusive. NHTSA
Verified fixes
- Restore amplifier power/grounds; correct low-voltage and ground-eyelet issues
- Repair body-bus wiring/connector faults (opens/shorts, pin tension/corrosion); correct splice-pack/star-point issues on single-wire GMLAN
- Remove/rewire interfering aftermarket audio devices or incorrect splices; ensure proper AMP-ON/wake integration
- Complete programming/power-cycle after SPS updates; reflash modules if a calibration addresses comm robustness
- Replace and initialize a failed amplifier only after proving network health
- Clear codes, perform an operate cycle (key/audio), and re-scan to confirm. NHTSA
Sources
- OBD-Codes – U0186 (Lost Communication With Audio Amplifier “A”) — canonical generic definition and CAN context. OBD-Codes.com
- RepairPal – U0186 — plain-language definition and diagnostic framing. RepairPal.com
- GM PI1149A (2017) — MOST/GMLAN infotainment: diagnose module-specific comm codes first (U0184 radio, U0186 amplifier); verify GMLAN, then powers/grounds/data before parts. NHTSA
- FCA/wiTECH bulletin (2014) — No audio / radio muted; U0186-00 lost comm with amplifier; amplifier not communicating on bus. NHTSA
- Jeep & Chrysler service charts (charm.li mirrors) — U0186 definition, monitored with IGN ON and battery 10–16 V, directs to TIPM/amp diagnostic procedure. Charm+1
- Ford audio diagnostics (pinpoint tests / service forum extract) — audio lost-comms test style (lists U0184/U0197) and connector inspection steps for ACM/DSP modules (corrosion/pushed-out pins). Practitioner corroboration. Charm+1