This DTC indicates the driver-side seat belt pretensioner ignition circuit shorts to body ground (GND) — Atto 3
This DTC indicates the driver-side seat belt pretensioner ignition circuit shorts to body ground (GND).
The BYD SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) pretensioner typically uses a pyrotechnic or motor-driven design with an operating resistance of approximately 2.0–3.0 Ω.
When the ACU (Airbag Control Unit) detects the insulation resistance between the driver pretensioner circuit and ground drops below the threshold (typically <100 Ω), it logs a short to ground.
This fault triggers the SRS fail-safe mode: the airbag warning light remains illuminated, the affected pretensioner may fail to deploy during a collision, and the system may stop monitoring other restraint devices, posing a severe safety hazard.
The short circuit may occur at the pretensioner itself, the under-seat wiring harness, the floor wiring harness, or the ACU connector.
- 1Worn wiring harness under the seat: During driver seat fore/aft adjustment, the pretensioner wiring harness rubs against the seat rail or floor metal edge. Prolonged friction damages the insulation, shorting the copper core to body ground.
- 2Connector water ingress and corrosion: Vehicle wading, a blocked sunroof drain, or water entering the B-pillar or under-seat area during washing oxidizes the pretensioner connector terminals (usually located under the seat or behind the B-pillar trim). A conductive water film or verdigris forms between the pins, causing a short to ground.
- 3Pretensioner internal fault: Aged and cracked insulation layer on the internal squib, or poor internal coil insulation from manufacturing causing a short circuit between the two terminals.
- 4Wiring harness crush damage: Vehicle modifications (such as installing seat covers or floor mats) or foreign objects (such as coins or metal accessories) entering the seat tracks crush the wiring harness and cause insulation damage.
- 5ACU connector fault: Airbag control unit connector terminals deformed, backed out, or shorted between pins, causing a false detection of a short to ground in the pretensioner circuit.
- 1Safe power-down: Turn off the ignition, disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds for the SRS capacitor to discharge. Verify the high-voltage system is in a safe state (applicable to hybrid/battery electric vehicles).
- 2Initial inspection: Visually inspect the pretensioner connectors (usually yellow plugs) under the driver's seat and inside the lower B-pillar trim panel for signs of water ingress, corrosion, loose connections, or physical damage.
- 3Resistance measurement: Remove driver seat (if necessary). Disconnect pretensioner connector. Use a multimeter to measure pretensioner body resistance (Normal: 2.0-3.0 Ω. If <1 Ω or infinite, pretensioner is damaged).
- 4Insulation check: Measure the resistance from the two pins of the pretensioner harness-side connector to body ground (normal: >1MΩ; if <100Ω, a short to ground exists). Also check for a short circuit between the pins.
- 5Wiring harness inspection: Follow the pretensioner wiring harness route (from under the seat, along the floor to the centre tunnel) and inspect the protective sleeve for damage. Closely inspect the seat slide rail mounting points and carpet trim strip for wear.
- 6Terminal inspection: Inspect the corresponding ACU connector terminals (usually located under the center console or inside the center armrest box) for backed-out, bent, or corroded pins. Clean or repair as necessary.
- 7Component replacement: If the pretensioner has an internal short circuit, replace the driver seat belt assembly (including the pretensioner); if the wiring harness is damaged, repair or replace the wiring harness; never use a multimeter to directly measure pretensioner resistance or perform a power-on test.
- 8System reset: Connect all connectors, reconnect the battery, clear the fault code using the VDS2000/VDS3000 diagnostic tool, perform the SRS system self-check, and verify B164111 does not return and the airbag warning light turns off.
Worn seat rails caused wiring harness short to ground.
After water ingress, connector corrosion caused a short circuit.
Internal short in pretensioner caused circuit failure
Aftermarket seat heater installation pinched the wiring loom.