DTC B175F indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control unit detects the left front curtain airbag (CAB) ignition circuit resistance falls outside the normal range (normal value: 2 — Atto 3
DTC B175F indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control unit detects the left front curtain airbag (CAB) ignition circuit resistance falls outside the normal range (normal value: 2.0–3.0 Ω; fault threshold: >6 Ω or open circuit).
This Level 2 airbag system fault means the affected curtain airbag may fail to deploy or deploy late during a collision, severely compromising occupant side-impact protection.
The SRS ECU continuously monitors each airbag inflator circuit resistance using a Wheatstone bridge.
Excessive resistance typically indicates poor circuit contact, high wiring impedance, or an open circuit within the inflator.
On BYD new energy vehicles, check for potential electromagnetic interference from the high-voltage interlock circuit affecting the SRS.
- 1Poor contact, oxidation, or corrosion at the left front side curtain airbag connector (especially the dedicated yellow connector near the B-pillar and C-pillar, where prolonged moisture causes terminal oxidation)
- 2Airbag wiring harness worn or partially broken (frequent door operation causes fatigue fractures in the roof side rail wiring harness at the hinge, creating a high-resistance connection)
- 3Internal open circuit in the clock spring (Spiral Cable) (if the curtain airbag circuit on this model routes through the clock spring under the steering wheel, poor contact in the internal flat cable)
- 4Airbag module internal squib open circuit due to aging (broken bridge wire or cold solder joint inside the gas generator).
- 5SRS control unit internal sampling circuit fault (drift in the ECU internal A/D converter or reference resistor causing a false high resistance reading)
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the low-voltage battery negative terminal, wait at least 3 minutes (to fully discharge the SRS backup capacitor), wear an anti-static wrist strap, and disable the high-voltage system (perform the high-voltage power-down procedure for new energy vehicles).
- 2Visual inspection: Check the left front side curtain airbag module connector (usually located inside the A-pillar/B-pillar trim panel) for looseness, water ingress, or corrosion. Check the wiring harness at the door hinge for wear or pinch marks.
- 3Circuit resistance measurement: Disconnect the airbag module connector. Use a dedicated airbag tester or high-precision multimeter (test current must be <1mA) to measure resistance on the wiring harness side. Normal resistance is <1Ω. If resistance is too high, measure in sections to locate the high-resistance point.
- 4Airbag module isolation test: Connect a dedicated 2.7Ω simulation resistor to the circuit in place of the airbag module. If the fault code clears and the resistance is normal, the airbag module is faulty. If the fault persists, continue inspecting the wiring harness.
- 5Clock spring inspection (if applicable): If this circuit passes through the steering wheel, inspect the clock spring connector, measure continuity, and replace if necessary.
- 6SRS ECU inspection: If the wiring harness and airbag are normal, check the SRS control unit power supply, ground, and internal faults. Program or replace the SRS ECU if necessary.
- 7Repair and verification: After repairing the wiring harness or replacing the faulty component, reconnect the battery. Clear the fault code using the BYD dedicated diagnostic tool. Perform an SRS system self-check to confirm B175F does not return and the system status displays normal.
Song MAX B-pillar connector water ingress and oxidation caused high resistance.
Qin Pro roof wiring harness fractured internally at hinge
Open circuit in internal squib of side curtain airbag module due to aging
SRS control unit sampling circuit false positive