This fault code indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control module detects a resistance of 0 Ω (or below 0 — Atto 3
This fault code indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control module detects a resistance of 0 Ω (or below 0.5 Ω) in the Left Front Side Curtain Airbag squib circuit.
Under normal conditions, standard airbag squib resistance is 2.0 to 3.0 Ω (typical BYD specification is 1.5 to 4.0 Ω).
A 0 Ω resistance indicates a short circuit in the squib circuit.
Possible causes include a wiring harness short to ground, a wire-to-wire short (power wire shorted to ground wire), or an internal short in the squib bridge wire.
This fault causes the SRS control module to identify the airbag circuit as abnormal, illuminate the airbag warning light, and disable Left Front Side Curtain Airbag deployment.
In a collision, this side curtain airbag will fail to inflate and deploy, severely compromising side impact protection.
Additionally, the short circuit creates a potential risk of unintended airbag deployment.
- 1Airbag igniter internal short circuit: The igniter bridge wire inside the left front curtain airbag module melts and fuses due to a manufacturing defect, aging, or impact, creating direct continuity between the two terminals and resulting in a resistance of 0.
- 2Harness short to ground: The harness from the SRS control unit to the left front side curtain airbag (usually routed along the left A-pillar, B-pillar, and C-pillar roof side rails) has damaged insulation and contacts the vehicle body metal frame, forming a short to ground.
- 3Connector terminal short circuit: The wiring harness connector below the A-pillar or near the B-pillar (usually connecting to the body harness) has water ingress, oxidation, corrosion, bent terminals, or metal debris, shorting the power terminal to the ground terminal.
- 4SRS control unit internal sampling circuit fault: Damage to the control unit internal A/D converter, sampling resistor, or drive circuit causes the sampled resistance of the left curtain airbag circuit to remain at 0, triggering a false fault.
- 5Vehicle modification or repair damage: When routing dash cam wiring, removing the A-pillar trim panel, installing a roof rack, or replacing the glass, screws or rivets penetrate the wiring harness, or metal edges pinch the harness, causing insulation damage and a short circuit.
- 1Safety preparation: Park the vehicle on level ground, apply the parking brake, turn the ignition switch to OFF, disconnect the 12V battery negative cable, and wait at least 90 seconds (to fully discharge the SRS backup power capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment).
- 2Fault Code Confirmation: Reconnect the battery, turn the ignition switch to ON, and use the BYD dedicated diagnostic tool (VDS2000 or VDS6000) to access the SRS system. Read the fault codes to confirm B175D is a current fault (Active), and record the ambient temperature and vehicle status from the freeze frame data.
- 3Visual inspection: Remove the left A-pillar, B-pillar, and C-pillar upper trim panels. Inspect the side curtain airbag wiring harness along the roof side rail for obvious damage, crushing, cuts, water stains, or burn marks. Focus on contact points between the wiring harness and the body metal.
- 4Measure disconnected airbag: Turn off the ignition, disconnect the negative battery terminal again, and wait 90 seconds. Disconnect the left front curtain airbag connector (usually located at the lower A-pillar or middle B-pillar; yellow plug with shorting bar). Use a digital multimeter to measure the resistance between the two terminals on the airbag side (not the wiring harness side). Normal resistance is 2.0-3.0Ω. If the resistance is 0Ω or close to 0Ω, the airbag module has an internal short circuit. Replace the left front curtain airbag assembly.
- 5Harness continuity check: If airbag resistance is normal, measure the harness-side connector: ① Measure resistance between the two terminals (resistance must be infinite; continuity indicates a short between wires). ② Measure resistance between each terminal and body ground (resistance must be infinite; continuity indicates a short to ground). Also check continuity between the harness and the SRS control unit.
- 6Shorting bar check: Verify the shorting bar inside the airbag connector returns to its normal position. This device must automatically short the airbag terminals upon plug disconnection. A stuck shorting bar may cause incorrect measurements or circuit faults.
- 7Control unit inspection: If the wiring harness and airbag are normal, check the SRS control unit connector terminals for corrosion or backed-out pins, and measure circuit insulation between the control unit and the airbag. If necessary, use an oscilloscope to check the diagnostic pulse output from the control unit.
- 8Repair and Verification: After repairing or replacing the shorted wiring harness/airbag, reconnect all connectors (listen for the locking click). Reconnect the battery and clear the fault code. Perform an SRS system self-check cycle (turn the ignition switch ON; observe the airbag warning light illuminate for 6 seconds, then turn off). Use a diagnostic tool to read the data stream and confirm the left front curtain airbag resistance has returned to the normal range. Perform a road test to confirm the fault does not recur.
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