DTC B170E-00 indicates an abnormally low-resistance connection between the Right Side Curtain Airbag squib circuit and body ground (GND) — Atto 3
DTC B170E-00 indicates an abnormally low-resistance connection between the Right Side Curtain Airbag squib circuit and body ground (GND).
In the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) architecture, two independent wires connect each airbag inflator to the ACU (Airbag Control Unit).
Normal resistance typically ranges from 1.5 to 3.0 Ω.
The ECU identifies a short to ground when it detects circuit resistance below the threshold (typically <1.0 Ω) or abnormal voltage to ground.
This fault causes: 1) The Right Side Curtain Airbag to fail to deploy properly in a collision, resulting in loss of side-impact protection. 2) The SRS to enter fail-safe mode, keeping the instrument cluster airbag warning lamp illuminated and degrading the vehicle safety rating. 3) A risk of unintended deployment in extreme cases due to intermittent wiring contact.
This is a passive safety system hard fault and requires immediate resolution.
- 1Wiring harness wear inside A-pillar/C-pillar trim panels: Frequent door operation or vehicle vibration wears through the insulation inside the corrugated conduit of the right curtain airbag wiring harness at the A-pillar upper trim panel, roof side rail, or C-pillar. This causes the wire to directly contact the vehicle body metal frame, creating a short to ground.
- 2Connector water ingress and corrosion: Poor sealing of the right curtain airbag connector (usually located inside the B-pillar or C-pillar trim) allows water entry during car washing, wading, or high-humidity conditions. This reduces insulation resistance between the pins or to ground, creating a short circuit.
- 3Airbag module internal fault: The bridgewire inside the right curtain airbag inflator shorts to the metal housing, or chemical degradation inside the igniter charge increases conductivity. This condition typically results in an abnormally low resistance value (<0.5Ω).
- 4SRS ECU internal drive circuit fault: Breakdown of the right-side curtain airbag drive transistor (FET) or a shorted filter capacitor inside the airbag control unit causes a false external short-to-ground detection. Confirm by disconnecting the airbag module and measuring the ECU terminal resistance to ground.
- 5Third-party modifications: When installing a dash cam, ambient lighting, or roof equipment, fixing screws can pierce the SRS wiring harness, or trim panel clips can crush and damage the harness. This is especially common after sunroof or headliner removal and installation.
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal and wait at least 90 seconds (to fully discharge the SRS backup power supply). For high-voltage vehicles, remove the Manual Service Disconnect (MSD). Wear an anti-static wrist strap. Place a 'Do Not Touch' warning sign in the steering wheel and airbag areas.
- 2Fault Confirmation and Freeze Frame Analysis: Use a VDS2000 or Launch X431 diagnostic tool to read the fault code. Verify B170E-00 is a current (Active) code, not a history code. Check the freeze frame data for crash sensor data, vehicle speed, and short-circuit resistance values. Record the ECU software version.
- 3Visual inspection and wiring harness check: Remove the right A-pillar upper trim panel, headliner edge trim, and C-pillar trim panel. Inspect the wiring harness corrugated conduit for damage. Focus on the sealing condition and terminal corrosion of the B-pillar airbag connector (yellow). Measure the wiring harness insulation resistance to ground (must be >1MΩ).
- 4Airbag module isolation test: Disconnect the right curtain airbag connector (the shorting bar will short the circuit) and measure the resistance to ground on the wiring harness side at the ECU end. If the resistance is >10kΩ, the fault is inside the airbag module; replace the right curtain airbag assembly. If the resistance remains <1Ω, the fault is in the wiring harness or the ECU.
- 5Segmented harness inspection: If testing confirms a harness short circuit, use the split-half method to narrow the scope. Cut or open the harness at the midpoint between the ECU and the airbag module for inspection. Focus the inspection on contact points between the roof side rail harness and the body sheet metal. Repair damaged wires and insulate using double-layer heat-shrink tubing.
- 6ECU verification: If the wiring harness and airbag module are normal, measure the resistance to ground at the SRS ECU right curtain airbag drive terminal. If abnormal, replace the ACU assembly, then perform configuration coding and crash sensor calibration.
- 7System reset and verification: Reconnect all connectors, restore power, clear the fault code, and perform the SRS system self-check (usually completes within 6 seconds after turning the ignition switch ON). Confirm B170E-00 does not reappear. Use the diagnostic tool to perform the 'airbag simulated deployment test' (special tool required). Finally, perform a road test for verification.
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