DTC B177F indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control module detects the Second Row Right Seatbelt Pretensioner circuit resistance exceeds the normal upper threshold (typically 2 — Atto 3
DTC B177F indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control module detects the Second Row Right Seatbelt Pretensioner circuit resistance exceeds the normal upper threshold (typically 2.0-3.0 Ω, depending on the vehicle model).
As a key passive safety system actuator, the pretensioner contains a gas generator and an ignition coil.
Excessive resistance indicates high circuit resistance or a partial open circuit, which can cause the following: 1) The SRS cannot monitor the pretensioner readiness status. 2) The pretensioner may fail to deploy at the designed timing during a collision, compromising occupant restraint protection. 3) The airbag warning light remains illuminated, forcing the entire SRS into fail-safe mode and potentially preventing front and side airbag deployment.
This constitutes a hard or intermittent fault requiring immediate repair.
- 1Poor pretensioner connector contact: Moisture, oxidation, or vibration increases terminal contact resistance in the B-pillar or under-seat connector, commonly occurring after water wading or operating the vehicle in high-humidity environments.
- 2Seat belt pretensioner unit fault: Internal ignition coil open circuit or gas generator internal resistance wire aging increases resistance from the standard 2.0 Ω to over 3.5 Ω.
- 3Hidden open circuit in wiring harness: Frequent folding and movement in the right middle-row seat area breaks internal copper strands while the insulation remains intact, creating an intermittent connection.
- 4SRS control module sampling circuit fault: ACU (Airbag Control Unit) internal A/D conversion circuit or monitoring chip fault causing a false high resistance reading.
- 5Improper repair or assembly: Pretensioner connector not fully locked after replacing the seat or interior trim panel, or a backed-out terminal causing insufficient contact pressure.
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal and wait at least 90 seconds (SRS capacitor discharge time). Use the diagnostic tool to confirm the fault code status is Current.
- 2Visual inspection: Remove the right middle-row seat side trim panel or lower B-pillar trim panel. Inspect the pretensioner connector (usually a yellow plug) for proper seating, water ingress, corrosion, or terminal back-out.
- 3Resistance measurement: Use a digital multimeter (0.1 Ω accuracy) to measure resistance directly at the pretensioner connector. Normal value is 1.8-2.2 Ω (at 20°C ambient). If resistance is >3.0 Ω, replace the pretensioner; if normal, proceed to the next step.
- 4Harness continuity test: Disconnect the SRS control module connector. Measure harness continuity between the pretensioner connector and the ACU. Resistance must be <1Ω. Measure insulation resistance to ground and to the power supply. Resistance must be >1MΩ.
- 5Load test: Replace the pretensioner with a dedicated SRS test resistor (2Ω/0.25W). Clear the fault code, power on, and run the self-check. If the fault code disappears, the pretensioner is faulty.
- 6Repair and verification: After replacing the faulty component or repairing the wiring harness, reconnect all connectors and the battery. Use the diagnostic tool to perform the 'SRS system self-check' and 'configuration verification'. Confirm B177F changes to a history fault or no fault codes are present.
- 7Function check: Perform seat folding and movement tests, and simulate a vibration environment. Confirm the fault does not recur and the airbag warning light turns off normally.
关于这个问题,我没有相关信息,您可以尝试问我其它问题,我会尽力为您解答~
Tang DM seatbelt pretensioner connector not locked after seat replacement
Yuan EV pretensioner internal coil open circuit
Qin Pro wiring harness chafing caused intermittent open circuit