This DTC indicates the driver side airbag squib resistance falls below the SRS control unit threshold (typically <1 — Atto 3
This DTC indicates the driver side airbag squib resistance falls below the SRS control unit threshold (typically <1.6Ω).
Normal airbag squib resistance ranges from 1.6Ω to 2.4Ω.
Low resistance indicates an abnormal short-circuit path in the circuit.
Potential causes include an internal airbag squib short circuit, a wiring harness short to ground, or a grounded connector terminal.
The SRS system classifies this fault as an unintended deployment risk, automatically disconnects the airbag circuit, and illuminates the airbag warning lamp.
During a side impact, the airbag may fail to deploy, disabling driver side protection.
Additionally, the BYD SRS fail-safe mechanism may trigger the seat belt pretensioner linked protection logic, compromising overall passive safety system performance.
- 1Driver side airbag squib internal short circuit (airbag module fault, possibly due to manufacturing defects or prolonged moisture exposure)
- 2Worn wiring harness insulation under the seat or inside the B-pillar causing a short to ground (frequent seat adjustment or foreign objects pinching the harness commonly cause this damage).
- 3Water ingress, oxidation, or terminal deformation at the airbag connector (yellow plug) causing a short circuit (common after vehicle wading or washing).
- 4Internal short circuit in the clock spring or seat wiring harness reel (e.g., long-term bending fatigue of the side airbag wiring harness passing through moving parts)
- 5SRS control unit internal monitoring circuit fault (abnormal control board sampling resistor or software false detection)
- 1Use the BYD dedicated diagnostic tool (VDS2000/VDS2100) to read all DTCs and freeze frame data. Record the environmental conditions when the fault occurred. Confirm B162B1A is a current fault and not a history fault.
- 2Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal and wait at least 3 minutes (some models require 90 seconds, but 3 minutes allows the SRS energy storage capacitor to fully discharge) to ensure the system enters a safe state.
- 3Remove the driver seat side trim panel or lower B-pillar trim panel. Locate the side airbag connector (marked in yellow, typically under the seat frame or in the middle of the B-pillar). Disconnect the connector and use a dedicated shorting pin to short the harness-side terminals to prevent electrostatic induction.
- 4Use a high-precision digital multimeter (0.1 Ω resolution) to measure the resistance on the airbag assembly side. Normal value: 1.6–2.4 Ω. If the measured value is <1.6 Ω or close to 0 Ω, the airbag assembly has an internal short circuit. Replace the driver side airbag module.
- 5Measure the wiring harness insulation resistance to ground (disconnect the SRS ECU connector and measure the resistance between the harness end and body ground). The normal value is >1 MΩ. If the resistance is too low, trace the wiring to locate damage. Focus the inspection on the wiring harness under the seat rails, near the seat adjustment mechanism, and inside the B-pillar trim.
- 6Check the connector terminals for corrosion, backed-out pins, or water stains. If necessary, clean with electrical contact cleaner or replace the wiring harness connector.
- 7Reconnect all components, restore battery power, and clear the fault code. Turn the ignition switch to the ON position, verify the SRS warning lamp completes its self-check (turns off after 6 seconds), and confirm the fault does not recur.
- 8Verify the system configuration (some models require 'Airbag Configuration Writing'). Finally, perform a simulated crash signal test or road test for verification.
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