DTC B160B-00 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) ECU detects the driver's front airbag (steering wheel airbag) igniter circuit resistance is below the calibrated threshold (usually <1 — Atto 3
DTC B160B-00 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) ECU detects the driver's front airbag (steering wheel airbag) igniter circuit resistance is below the calibrated threshold (usually <1.0Ω).
Normal airbag igniter resistance is 2.0-3.0Ω.
Low resistance usually indicates a circuit short to ground, an internal short in the airbag module, or abnormal connector continuity.
This fault causes the SRS ECU to register an abnormal airbag circuit.
The airbag may fail to deploy during a collision or deploy unintentionally while driving.
Consequently, the system illuminates the airbag warning lamp and disables the airbag function.
- 1Clock spring (spiral cable) internal short circuit: Frequent steering wheel rotation wears the flat cable insulation inside the clock spring, causing a short circuit between the core wires or between a core wire and the housing. This is the most common cause.
- 2Airbag connector short circuit: Water ingress, bent pins, terminal corrosion, or foreign objects cause abnormal continuity in the yellow dedicated connector (usually located under the steering wheel or on the side of the steering column).
- 3Internal airbag module fault: Igniter bridge wire short circuit or moisture in the pyrotechnic charge resulting in abnormally low resistance.
- 4Harness wear causing short circuit: Harness near the steering column rubs against a metal bracket or the steering wheel frame, damaging the insulation or short-circuiting to body ground.
- 5SRS ECU internal sampling circuit fault: Damaged ECU internal A/D converter or reference resistor causing distorted resistance sampling (less common).
- 1Safety preparation: Turn off the ignition. Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS capacitor. Wear an anti-static wrist strap.
- 2Visual inspection: Inspect the yellow airbag connector below the steering wheel for looseness, water ingress, or obvious corrosion; inspect the clock spring for visible damage or burn marks; inspect the steering column wiring harness for wear.
- 3Disconnect the airbag: Carefully remove the driver airbag module (use a special tool or screwdriver to release the spring clips on both sides) and disconnect the airbag connector (short-circuit first to prevent static electricity).
- 4Measure the clock spring: Use a digital multimeter (high-impedance setting; do not use the buzzer setting) to measure the resistance across the clock spring terminals. Normal resistance is 0-1Ω (continuity with extremely low resistance). If the measured resistance is <0.5Ω and both terminals show continuity to ground, replace the clock spring.
- 5Measure the wiring harness: Disconnect the SRS ECU connector and measure the resistance to ground of the circuit from the ECU to the airbag. The resistance should be infinite. If continuity exists, inspect the wiring harness for damage.
- 6Replacement verification: Connect a 2-3Ω dummy load (special airbag test resistor) to the clock spring. Clear the fault code. If the code does not return, the fault is in the airbag module. If the code remains, the fault is in the wiring harness or ECU.
- 7Repair and Verification: Repair the short circuit or replace the faulty component (clock spring, airbag module, or wiring harness). Reconnect the battery. Use the VDS2000 or a BYD dedicated diagnostic tool to clear the fault code. Perform an SRS system self-check. Verify the fault code does not return and the airbag warning light turns off.
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