DTC B1601 indicates a short to ground in the driver frontal airbag (DAB) ignition circuit — Atto 8
DTC B1601 indicates a short to ground in the driver frontal airbag (DAB) ignition circuit.
In the BYD SRS (Supplemental Restraint System), this fault means damaged wire insulation in the circuit between the airbag control unit (ACU) and the driver airbag contacts the vehicle body ground, or an internal short to ground exists within the airbag inflator.
This causes circuit resistance to drop well below the standard range (normally 2.0-3.0 Ω, approaching 0 Ω during a short circuit).
When the ACU detects this abnormal drop in circuit impedance, it identifies a short-to-ground fault and triggers protection mode: the instrument cluster SRS warning light illuminates continuously, the system disables the driver airbag to prevent inadvertent deployment, and the airbag fails to deploy during a collision, severely compromising occupant safety.
- 1Worn or broken flat cable inside the clock spring causes the wiring to short to the steering wheel metal frame or ground wire.
- 2Water ingress, corrosion, or deformed pins in the yellow airbag wiring harness connector below the steering wheel (usually near the combination switch), causing a terminal short to ground.
- 3Abrasion or crushing damages the insulation on the wiring harness between the ACU and the steering wheel where it passes through the A-pillar, dashboard, or floor, causing a short to body ground.
- 4Internal fault in the driver airbag module (inflator igniter), causing one of the two igniter terminals to short to ground.
- 5Airbag control module (SRS ECU) internal driver circuit fault falsely reporting a short to ground (verify after ruling out external wiring).
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS backup power supply and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Fault confirmation: Connect BYD VDS or original diagnostic tool, read DTC B1601 and freeze frame data, confirm fault status is Current, and record vehicle condition when the fault occurred.
- 3Visual inspection: Check the yellow airbag wiring harness connector below the steering wheel for looseness, water ingress, oxidation, or damage. Check the clock spring exterior for burn marks.
- 4Airbag module isolation test: Remove the driver airbag and measure the resistance between the two terminals of the airbag connector (normal: 2.0-3.0 Ω). Measure the resistance from each terminal to ground (should be infinite; if continuity exists, the airbag has an internal short circuit; replace the airbag).
- 5Clock spring test: After disconnecting, measure continuity between the clock spring upstream (ACU side) and downstream (airbag side). Measure the insulation to ground at each terminal and rotate the steering wheel to check for intermittent shorts to ground.
- 6Harness continuity and insulation test: Use a multimeter to test the harness from the ACU to the steering wheel for continuity to ground. Inspect the harness routed through the A-pillar and floor for wear or damaged insulation.
- 7Component replacement: Replace the faulty component (clock spring, wiring harness, or airbag assembly) based on the test results. After replacing the clock spring, center the steering wheel to prevent abnormal angle sensor data.
- 8System reset and verification: Reconnect all connectors and the battery. Use the diagnostic tool to clear the DTC. Perform the SRS system self-check. Confirm B1601 does not reappear. Road test the vehicle to confirm the SRS warning light is off.
Internal wear of the clock spring caused a short to ground.
Connector corrosion after wading caused short to ground
Internal short circuit in airbag assembly after accident repair