This DTC indicates the Airbag Control Unit (ACU) detects a short to positive (+B) in the RH front side curtain airbag ignition circuit — Atto 3
This DTC indicates the Airbag Control Unit (ACU) detects a short to positive (+B) in the RH front side curtain airbag ignition circuit.
Under normal conditions, the airbag ignition circuit remains in a high-resistance state (infinite) or exhibits a specific resistance (typically >2Ω) only during circuit diagnostics.
When the ACU detects continuous battery voltage (12V) or a resistance near 0Ω on this circuit, it logs a short to power.
This hardwire short circuit causes the following: 1) Airbag fails to deploy during a collision (power supply clamps the circuit); 2) Unintended airbag deployment in extreme cases (if the ACU drive circuit and the shorted point form a complete circuit); 3) The ACU enters fail-safe mode, cuts power to this circuit, illuminates the SRS warning light, and degrades overall airbag system functionality.
- 1Wiring harness insulation wear: The right front curtain airbag wiring harness routes along the A-pillar and roof side rail. Long-term vibration or door seal aging causes the harness to rub against body metal edges. Damaged insulation allows the harness to contact power supply wires (such as the reading light or sunroof motor power wires).
- 2Connector water ingress and oxidation: The sealing ring on the airbag connector (usually yellow) located in the headliner or below the A-pillar degrades. Water from car washes or sunroof leaks forms an electrolytic bridge between the pins, short-circuiting the igniter pin to the power supply pin.
- 3Airbag Control Unit (ACU) internal fault: Internal ACU ignition drive transistor breakdown or filter capacitor short circuit causes continuous high-level output on this channel.
- 4Damage from non-professional modifications: mounting screws piercing the airbag wiring harness when installing a dashcam or headliner ambient lighting, or mistakenly connecting the airbag circuit as a ground or power wire during wiring.
- 5Airbag module internal short circuit: The bridge wire inside the curtain airbag inflator igniter shorts to the housing, or moisture in the ignition powder causes an abnormal drop in resistance.
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the ACU backup power supply. Wear an anti-static wrist strap. Never use a multimeter resistance setting to directly measure the airbag inflator.
- 2Visual inspection: Remove the right A-pillar trim, rear section of the headliner, and right rear C-pillar trim. Inspect the curtain airbag wiring harness (yellow corrugated conduit) for abrasion, crushing, or puncture marks. Focus on the rubber grommets where the harness passes through openings.
- 3Connector diagnosis: Disconnect the connector between the ACU and the right front curtain airbag. Set a multimeter to voltage mode and measure the airbag-side harness voltage to ground. A 12V reading confirms a harness short to power. Measure the resistance from the ACU-side pins to power to confirm the ACU has no internal short circuit.
- 4Sectional isolation: Use a short-circuit detector or sectional disconnection method to divide the wiring harness into three sections: ACU to A-pillar, A-pillar to C-pillar, and C-pillar to airbag. Measure the insulation resistance to power supply for each section to locate the short circuit.
- 5Component replacement verification: If the wiring harness is normal, connect a dedicated airbag simulator (2Ω) to the ACU in place of the curtain airbag. Clear the fault code and power on for a self-check. If the fault code disappears, replace the airbag module; if it remains, replace the ACU.
- 6Repair verification: After repairing the damaged wiring harness (insulate with double-layer heat shrink tubing; do not simply wrap with electrical tape) or replacing the faulty component, reconnect all connectors and restore power. Use the diagnostic tool to perform 'SRS system self-test' and 'crash sensor calibration'. Confirm B176712 does not return and the SRS warning lamp turns off.
BYD E2: Worn A-pillar wiring harness causing intermittent short circuit
BYD Qin EV sunroof leak caused connector short circuit
E3: Wiring harness incorrectly connected during dash cam installation
ACU internal driver circuit fault
Curtain airbag inflator internal short circuit