DTC B1600 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control unit detects an open circuit or connection failure in the driver front airbag (steering wheel airbag) circuit — Atto 8
DTC B1600 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control unit detects an open circuit or connection failure in the driver front airbag (steering wheel airbag) circuit.
Specifically, electrical circuit resistance between the airbag control unit and the driver airbag assembly exceeds the standard range (normal: approx. 2-3Ω; fault: typically >10Ω or infinite).
This hard-wired connection fault indicates the control unit continuously fails to establish effective communication with the driver airbag during vehicle self-test or driving.
Upon triggering, the SRS enters fail-safe mode, illuminates the airbag warning lamp, and disables driver airbag deployment.
In a collision, this airbag may fail to inflate normally, severely compromising passive safety performance.
Some early BYD petrol models or specific powertrain systems define B1600 as "mixture too rich." However, based on current DTC information and applicable models (Yuan, Tang, Song, Qin series), this analysis focuses on the airbag system circuit fault.
- 1Clock spring internal open circuit: Frequent steering wheel rotation causes fatigue breakage of the internal flat ribbon cable, resulting in an open circuit.
- 2Wiring harness connector terminals backed out or loose: especially loose, backed-out, or oxidized pins at mating connectors such as GJK14, or poor contact at the airbag connector under the steering wheel.
- 3Airbag assembly internal open circuit: Internal open circuit in the airbag squib or excessive contact resistance at the airbag connector.
- 4Power supply system fault: Low battery voltage (<11V) or a poor connection in the SRS control unit power supply circuit causes the control unit to incorrectly detect abnormal circuit resistance.
- 5Physical damage to the wiring harness: Internal copper wire breakage in the wiring harness near the steering wheel due to long-term twisting and wear, or incorrect harness connection after accident repairs.
- 1Initial diagnosis: Use the dedicated diagnostic tool to read the fault code, confirm if B1600 is a current or stored fault, and observe if the airbag warning light remains illuminated.
- 2Power supply system check: Measure battery voltage (should be >12V). Check the constant power (B+) and ignition switch power (IG) voltages at the SRS control unit to rule out false faults caused by unstable voltage.
- 3Circuit resistance measurement: Disconnect the battery negative terminal, wait 90 seconds for the capacitor to discharge, unplug the SRS control unit connector, and measure the driver airbag circuit resistance (standard value: 2-3 Ω). If the reading is infinite, the circuit is open.
- 4Step-by-step fault isolation: Remove the steering wheel. Check the connection status of the clock spring lower connector (steering column side) and upper connector (airbag side). Measure the continuity of the clock spring (resistance must remain stable while turning the steering wheel).
- 5Dummy load test: Connect a dedicated airbag simulator (2Ω resistor) to the wiring harness in place of the actual airbag. If the fault code clears and the system passes the self-check, the airbag unit is faulty; otherwise, the wiring is faulty.
- 6Detailed wiring harness inspection: Specifically check GJK14 and other harness connectors for backed-out pins or looseness. Check for loose harness retaining clips causing harness pinching and chafing.
- 7Repair verification: After repairing or replacing the faulty component, reconnect all connectors and the battery negative terminal. Clear the fault codes, perform the SRS system self-check cycle (cycle the ignition switch ON-OFF three times), and confirm the warning light turns off and no fault codes return.
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