DTC B1610 indicates the Airbag Control Unit (ACU) detects an open circuit in the front passenger airbag squib circuit — Atto 3
DTC B1610 indicates the Airbag Control Unit (ACU) detects an open circuit in the front passenger airbag squib circuit.
Resistance falls outside the normal range (normal: approximately 1.5-3.0Ω; fault: typically >10Ω or infinite).
This indicates a physical break in the circuit between the ACU and the front passenger airbag module (located inside the right side of the dashboard).
Possible causes include a loose wiring harness connector, an open circuit in the airbag module inflator, wiring harness wear or breakage, or a clock spring fault (if applicable).
This fault prevents the front passenger airbag from deploying during a collision, severely compromising occupant protection.
Other vehicle systems continue to operate normally.
- 1Front passenger airbag wiring harness connector loose or disconnected: Located inside the right side of the dashboard or at the floor wiring harness joint. Improper seating during previous repairs or vehicle vibration may loosen the connector.
- 2Airbag module internal open circuit: Internal open circuit in the inflator igniter, typically resulting from manufacturing defects or long-term environmental exposure.
- 3Worn or broken wiring harness: Repeated bending wears the front passenger-side floor wiring harness near the seat slide rail, or metal edges cut the wiring harness inside the dashboard.
- 4Connector pin oxidation or terminal back-out: Moisture ingress causes pin corrosion, or poor terminal retention causes terminals to back out, resulting in poor contact.
- 5Airbag Control Unit (ACU) internal fault: False report from an ACU internal monitoring circuit fault, or a cold solder joint at an internal connection point (less common, but requires elimination).
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal and wait at least 3 minutes to fully discharge the SRS system capacitors and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Initial check: Use the diagnostic tool to read and confirm DTC B1610 is an active fault, check if the airbag warning light remains illuminated, and record freeze frame data.
- 3Visual inspection: Remove the passenger-side dashboard side trim panel. Check the airbag module wiring harness connector (usually a yellow plug) for a secure connection. Verify the connector locking tab is intact.
- 4Resistance measurement: Use a digital multimeter to measure the airbag circuit resistance (must use a dedicated airbag load simulator or ensure multimeter current is <1mA). The normal value is 1.5-3.0Ω. A reading of OL or infinity confirms an open circuit.
- 5Sectional inspection: Disconnect the airbag module connector and measure resistance on the wiring harness side and the module side separately. If the module side has an open circuit, replace the airbag module. If the wiring harness side has an open circuit, check floor wiring harness continuity. Focus on the bent section under the seat.
- 6Wiring harness repair: If the wiring harness is damaged, repair it using high-temperature wire of the same specification (usually 0.5mm² twisted pair). Solder the connections and apply double insulation. Do not use simple wire terminals.
- 7Verification Test: Reconnect all components and the battery. Clear the fault code using the diagnostic tool. Cycle the ignition switch. Confirm B1610 does not return and verify the airbag warning light turns off normally.
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