DTC B164B indicates the airbag control unit (SRS ECU) detects an abnormally low-resistance path (typically <1 — Atto 3
DTC B164B indicates the airbag control unit (SRS ECU) detects an abnormally low-resistance path (typically <1.5Ω) between the front passenger seat belt pretensioner ignition circuit and body ground (GND).
As a pyrotechnic safety device, the pretensioner igniter has a normal resistance of approximately 2.0-3.0Ω.
A short to ground causes the SRS system to detect a front passenger pretensioner circuit fault, illuminate the 'Airbag Fault Warning Light' continuously, and enter fail-safe mode.
During a collision, the system may fail to deploy the front passenger pretensioner and may subsequently disable the front passenger airbag.
This fault is a hard short to ground.
Repair immediately to ensure passive safety system integrity.
- 1Damaged yellow SRS wiring harness sleeve under the front passenger seat. Long-term friction between the wire and the seat slide rail or body metal wears through the insulation, causing a short to ground.
- 2Poorly sealed pretensioner connector (usually located below the B-pillar or under the seat) allows water ingress after car washes or wading, causing a short circuit between terminals or a short to ground.
- 3Frequent forward and backward seat adjustment causes the seat rail to pinch the wiring harness, or a loose wiring harness retaining clip allows the wire to contact a sharp edge on the vehicle body.
- 4During accident vehicle repairs, the pretensioner wiring harness deviated from the standard routing layout, directly contacting a metal point on the vehicle body.
- 5Internal igniter coil insulation failure within the pretensioner assembly (rare, usually associated with previous deployment or aging).
- 1Safety Preparation: Turn off the ignition switch, 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: Connect the BYD dedicated diagnostic tool (ED400 or VDS), read the DTC B164B status, confirm it is an 'Active' fault rather than a history fault, and record the freeze frame data.
- 3Visual inspection: Remove the front passenger seat (if necessary) and the lower B-pillar trim panel. Check the yellow SRS wiring harness sleeve for integrity. Focus on the seat slide rail mounting points and the area where the wiring harness passes through the floor for signs of abrasion, crushing, or water ingress.
- 4Resistance measurement: Disconnect the pretensioner connector. Use a multimeter to measure the resistance between the wiring harness side (ECU side) terminal and body ground. Normal value: >1 MΩ (infinite). A resistance of <1 Ω confirms a short to ground.
- 5Section-by-section diagnosis: If the wiring harness has a short to ground, use the 'half-split method' to disconnect intermediate connectors step-by-step and locate the exact short circuit (commonly found at harness bends under the seat or the B-pillar junction).
- 6Pretensioner inspection: Measure the resistance across the two terminals of the pretensioner unit. Standard value: 2.0-3.0 Ω (refer to the workshop manual). If the resistance is abnormal (<1 Ω or >5 Ω), replace the pretensioner assembly.
- 7Repair and isolation: Repair the damaged wiring harness using double-layer heat shrink tubing. Resecure the harness to maintain a >20mm clearance from the vehicle body metal. Install an anti-abrasion sleeve if necessary.
- 8System reset: Reconnect all connectors, connect the battery, use the diagnostic tool to clear the fault code, perform 'SRS System Self-Diagnosis', and confirm B164B no longer appears and the airbag warning light turns off.
Worn seat rails caused the wiring harness to short to ground.
Connector shorted due to water ingress after wading
Improper wiring harness routing after accident repairs
Internal short circuit in pretensioner