DTC B1642-00 indicates the driver-side seat belt pretensioner ignition circuit shorts to the vehicle power supply (B+) — Atto 3
DTC B1642-00 indicates the driver-side seat belt pretensioner ignition circuit shorts to the vehicle power supply (B+).
In the BYD SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) architecture, the pretensioner operates as a pyrotechnic actuator.
Normally, both terminals exhibit a high-resistance state (open circuit) to power and ground.
This fault indicates a wire in the pretensioner harness or connector shorts to constant power.
This condition can cause: 1) the SRS ECU to detect abnormal voltage, illuminate the airbag warning lamp, and disable the airbag system; 2) the pretensioner to deploy accidentally in extreme cases; 3) the pretensioner to fail during a collision, endangering occupant safety.
This fault involves the dedicated yellow SRS harness under the driver's seat, an area prone to mechanical wear from fore-aft seat movement.
- 1SRS wiring harness worn under driver seat rail: Frequent fore-and-aft seat adjustment causes the seat rail edge to cut the harness insulation, shorting it against body power wires (such as the seat heater supply wire or constant power memory wire).
- 2Floor harness connector water ingress: Liquid penetrates the driver's footwell area during wading or cleaning, causing an electrolytic short circuit between the pretensioner connector pins (usually located under the seat or B-pillar), especially if foreign matter bridges the pins.
- 3SRS ECU internal drive circuit fault: Ignition drive transistor breakdown inside the airbag control module causes the pretensioner port to continuously output power supply voltage.
- 4Foreign object trapped under the seat: Metal objects (such as coins or keys) or aftermarket wiring harnesses (such as dash cam hardwire kits or seat ventilation retrofit wiring) pinch the SRS harness, damaging the insulation and causing a short to power.
- 5Pretensioner internal short circuit: The igniter squib inside the seat belt retractor pretensioner unit shorts to the housing (less common, usually accompanied by abnormal resistance).
- 1Safety preparation: Turn off the ignition, disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Visual inspection: Remove the driver's seat (leave the wiring harness connected). Inspect the yellow SRS wiring harness sleeve under the seat rail for wear. Inspect the connector under the seat (usually marked DAB or Pretensioner) for water ingress, corrosion, or bent pins.
- 3Circuit measurement: Disconnect the connector between the SRS ECU and the pretensioner. Use a multimeter to measure the resistance from the pretensioner-side wiring harness to body ground and battery positive (B+). Normal resistance is infinite (OL). A low resistance reading indicates the wiring harness is shorted to power.
- 4Harness isolation test: Strip the harness sleeve section by section along the pretensioner harness routing (from below the B-pillar, across the floor, to the seat) and inspect for damage. Focus on intersections with the seat heating harness and memory power supply harness.
- 5Component replacement: If the wiring harness shows no damage, measure the pretensioner body resistance (normally 2-3Ω). If the resistance is abnormal, replace the pretensioner assembly. If both the wiring harness and pretensioner are normal, replace the SRS ECU.
- 6System reset: After repair, reconnect all connectors and the battery. Use VDS2000/3000 or Launch X431 to configure and code the SRS system, clear fault codes, and perform static/dynamic testing.
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