DTC B162A1A indicates the airbag control module (SRS ECU) detects a resistance of 0 ohms, or close to 0, in the driver's side airbag circuit (usually integrated into the seat side) — Atto 3
DTC B162A1A indicates the airbag control module (SRS ECU) detects a resistance of 0 ohms, or close to 0, in the driver's side airbag circuit (usually integrated into the seat side).
Normal airbag circuit resistance ranges from 2-3 ohms (including the airbag inflator resistance and wiring harness impedance).
A resistance of 0 indicates a short circuit.
Possible causes include damaged wiring harness insulation causing a short between positive and negative terminals, connector pins shorting to ground, an internal short in the airbag inflator, or an SRS control module sampling circuit fault.
This fault prevents the side airbag from deploying during a collision, resulting in a loss of protection.
In extreme cases, poor contact at the short circuit point can produce arcing and risk unintended deployment.
Triggering this fault code illuminates the instrument cluster airbag warning light and may disable the entire airbag system.
- 1Seat slide rail or frame edge chafing the airbag wiring harness: Frequent forward and backward driver seat adjustment rubs the yellow airbag wiring harness (located under the seat) against the metal slide rail. Damaged insulation causes the core wire to short to ground or short across the positive and negative terminals.
- 2Connector water ingress and oxidation: Vehicle wading, car washing, or sunroof leaks allow water into the under-seat airbag connector (usually located at the lower left of the seat), causing a short circuit between pins or abnormally low resistance due to corrosion.
- 3Improper seat removal and installation: After removing the seat during repair or modification, the airbag connector is not fully inserted (no locking click heard), the connector locking tab is broken, or a metal foreign object inside the connector shorts the pins.
- 4Modified wiring interference: When retrofitting seat heating, ventilation, or massage functions, an improperly secured aftermarket wiring harness compresses and rubs against the original airbag wiring harness, or pierces the insulation, causing a short circuit.
- 5SRS control module fault: An internal sampling circuit fault, A/D converter fault, or software calibration error causes the module to misread a normal resistance value as 0 ohms (confirm using an oscilloscope).
- 1Safety preparation: Switch the vehicle OFF, disconnect the low-voltage battery negative terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds to ensure the SRS capacitor fully discharges, preventing accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Visual inspection: Inspect the yellow dedicated wiring harness under the driver's seat (typically marked with yellow corrugated conduit or yellow tape) for wear, cuts, or crush marks, focusing on the seat slide rails, seat frame edges, and harness bend points.
- 3Connector check: Verify the airbag connector under the seat (usually yellow with a shorting bar) is fully seated, the locking mechanism is intact, and the inside is free of water stains, oxidation, or foreign matter. If necessary, clean with electrical contact cleaner and blow dry.
- 4Resistance measurement: Use a high-impedance digital multimeter (do not use an analog multimeter). Disconnect the airbag connector. Measure the resistance on the wiring harness side (leading to the SRS ECU) and the airbag side (located inside the seat) separately. Normal airbag resistance is approximately 2-3 ohms. The wiring harness side should show an open circuit (infinite resistance). A reading of 0 ohms indicates a short circuit on the corresponding side.
- 5Sectional troubleshooting: If the short circuit is on the wiring harness side, strip and inspect the harness section by section along the circuit. If the short circuit is on the airbag side, remove the seat trim cover to inspect the side airbag inflator body (this usually requires replacing the seat airbag assembly).
- 6Repair/Replace: Repair the damaged wiring harness (wrap with multiple layers of high-temperature insulating tape). Replace the damaged connector (use the genuine yellow dedicated airbag connector and engage the double lock). If the airbag inflator is faulty, replace the entire seat airbag module.
- 7System verification: Reconnect all connectors, verify the shorting bar springs open normally, and reconnect the 12 V battery. Use VDS or a dedicated diagnostic tool to clear the fault code. Perform an SRS system self-check. Confirm DTC B162A1A does not return and the instrument cluster warning light turns off.
- 8Function test: Move the seat forward and backward and adjust the backrest angle multiple times. Simulate driving vibration to confirm the fault no longer occurs intermittently.
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