The BYD SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) strictly defines DTC B1693 as "Driver Airbag Circuit Resistance Low/Short to Ground", not a simple ground connection issue — Atto 3
The BYD SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) strictly defines DTC B1693 as "Driver Airbag Circuit Resistance Low/Short to Ground", not a simple ground connection issue.
This fault indicates the airbag control unit (ACU) detects the driver-side airbag (steering wheel airbag) firing circuit resistance is below the standard threshold (normal range 2.0–3.0 Ω; values below 1.5 Ω trigger this code).
Potential causes include an internal short circuit in the steering wheel clock spring flexible printed circuit, abnormal contact resistance at the airbag connector, damaged wiring harness insulation causing a short to ground, or a faulty ACU internal firing driver circuit.
This fault prevents airbag deployment during a collision (open-circuit condition) or causes unintentional deployment without a collision (short-circuit condition), representing a critical safety function failure.
- 1Short circuit or break in the internal FPC ribbon cable of the steering wheel clock spring: Long-term steering wheel rotation causes fatigue damage to the flexible printed circuit inside the clock spring, resulting in abnormal circuit resistance or an intermittent short to ground.
- 2Poor contact at the driver-side airbag connector: loose airbag plug latch at the rear of the steering wheel, oxidized terminals, or water ingress, causing resistance fluctuations or a false short circuit.
- 3Steering column wiring harness mechanical wear: Steering wheel rotation causes the airbag wiring harness to rub against the steering column and instrument panel frame, damaging the insulation and causing the harness to short to body ground.
- 4Airbag Control Unit (ACU) poor ground connection or internal fault: Loose or oxidized ACU ground terminal, or damaged internal ignition driver MOSFET, causing the resistance detection circuit to generate a false reading.
- 5Airbag inflator internal short circuit: Damaged insulation on the driver-side airbag igniter bridge wire causes the resistance value to fall below the standard range.
- 1Safe power-down: Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal and wait at least 3 minutes to fully discharge the SRS system capacitors and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Initial visual inspection: Inspect the airbag wiring harness below the steering wheel for obvious wear or damaged insulation; verify the airbag connector (usually yellow) is fully inserted and locked, and check for a broken retaining clip.
- 3Static resistance measurement: Remove the steering wheel, disconnect the airbag connector, and use a multimeter to measure the airbag unit resistance (standard value: 2.0-3.0 Ω). Measure the resistance to ground at the lower end of the clock spring (ACU side) to check for a short to ground (resistance should be infinite).
- 4Clock spring continuity check: Remove the steering wheel clock spring. Measure clock spring continuity in the free state and while rotating it 360° in each direction. Check for intermittent open or short circuits. Inspect the clock spring connector pins for oxidation or deformation.
- 5Harness routing inspection: Inspect the harness routing from the steering wheel, through the steering column, to the ACU. Check for harness chafing at the firewall pass-through hole, instrument panel frame mounting points, and near the seat slide rails (if applicable). Repair damaged insulation and re-secure the harness to prevent interference.
- 6Component replacement: If the clock spring is faulty, replace it with a genuine steering wheel clock spring assembly (note: some models require angle position matching). If the airbag unit resistance is abnormal, or the clock spring output terminal is normal but the ACU terminal is abnormal, replace the corresponding component.
- 7System configuration and reset: Reconnect all connectors and the battery. Use the VDS2000 or Launch X431 diagnostic tool to clear the fault codes, and perform "SRS system configuration write" or "ECU coding" (on some models, rewrite the VIN and configuration parameters after replacing the clock spring).
- 8Dynamic function verification: Start the vehicle and confirm the airbag warning light turns off after the self-check. Turn the steering wheel fully left and fully right 3 times each to simulate steering conditions and check if the fault code returns. Perform an SRS system self-diagnosis and confirm there are no current or stored fault codes.
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