This DTC indicates the SRS control module detects the driver-side seat belt pretensioner squib circuit resistance at or near 0 ohms, indicating a short circuit — Atto 3
This DTC indicates the SRS control module detects the driver-side seat belt pretensioner squib circuit resistance at or near 0 ohms, indicating a short circuit.
As a key actuator in the passive safety system, the pretensioner ignites the squib during a collision to generate gas and tighten the seat belt, eliminating slack between the occupant and the belt.
A 0-ohm resistance indicates an internal short circuit in the squib, a short to ground in the wiring harness, or a fault in the internal driver circuit of the SRS module.
This fault causes the SRS system to enter degraded mode.
The driver-side airbag may fail to deploy properly, and the airbag warning lamp illuminates.
On some BYD new energy models, similar DTCs may relate to the high-voltage system (such as the traction battery charging circuit).
However, the official repair manual explicitly assigns B1645-00 to the SRS restraint system.
- 1Driver seat belt pretensioner squib internal short circuit (blown internal bridge wire or damp propellant causing continuity)
- 2Pretensioner wiring harness worn or pinched, causing a short to body ground (commonly near the seat rail or inside the B-pillar trim).
- 3SRS control module internal igniter driver circuit fault (MOSFET breakdown or filter capacitor short circuit)
- 4Water ingress and corrosion in the pretensioner connector causing a short circuit between terminals (common after driving through water or washing the vehicle)
- 5Non-professional modifications causing wiring harness damage (e.g., accidentally damaging the SRS wiring harness when installing seat heating or ventilation systems)
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Fault confirmation: Use VDS or a dedicated diagnostic tool to read all DTCs, check for accompanying fault codes (e.g., B1644-00 Driver Pretensioner Resistance Too High), and record freeze frame data.
- 3Visual inspection: Remove the driver's seat and lower B-pillar trim panel. Check the pretensioner wiring harness for wear, damaged insulation, or compression marks. Check the connector for water ingress or corrosion.
- 4Resistance measurement: Disconnect the SRS module from the pretensioner. Use a digital multimeter to measure the resistance between the pretensioner connector terminals (normal value: 1.5-3.0 Ω). Measure the resistance from each terminal to ground (should be greater than 1 MΩ).
- 5Harness insulation test: If pretensioner resistance is normal, measure harness continuity and insulation to ground between the pretensioner and the SRS module. Carefully inspect the harness sleeve in the moving area under the seat.
- 6Component replacement: If testing confirms an internal pretensioner short circuit, replace the driver seat belt assembly (the pretensioner is usually not available separately); if the wiring harness is faulty, repair or replace the harness; if suspecting the SRS module, perform a substitution test.
- 7System reset: After repair, reconnect all components, clear the fault codes, and perform an SRS system self-check (turn the ignition switch ON and verify the warning light turns off). Calibrate the crash sensor if necessary.
Qin EV300 seat belt pretensioner connector shorted after water wading
After accident repair, aftermarket seatbelt assembly caused zero resistance.
New energy vehicle high-voltage charging resistor fault (system false positive or coding conflict)