DTC B1611 indicates a short to ground in the front passenger airbag (PAB) ignition circuit — Atto 8
DTC B1611 indicates a short to ground in the front passenger airbag (PAB) ignition circuit.
Specifically, the SRS control unit detects an abnormally low-resistance connection (typically less than 2-3Ω) between the passenger airbag inflator circuit (usually the high-level trigger wire) and vehicle ground (GND).
This short circuit prevents normal airbag deployment (diverting ignition energy to ground) or, in extreme cases, causes inadvertent deployment due to static electricity or electromagnetic interference.
This fault constitutes a severe active safety system failure.
The SRS control unit immediately disables the front passenger airbag, illuminates the airbag warning light, and may simultaneously lock the seat belt pretensioner, severely compromising passive safety performance.
- 1Passenger-side dashboard wiring harness wear: Long-term vibration damages the airbag wiring harness insulation where it passes through the dashboard frame or near the steering column, causing contact with the metal body and creating a short to ground.
- 2Connector water ingress and corrosion: The airbag connector (usually yellow) located under the center console or floor is poorly sealed. Driving through water or an A/C condensate leak causes electrolytic corrosion between the pins, resulting in a short to ground.
- 3Repair damage: Tools scratching or crushing the wiring harness during A/C filter replacement, radio replacement, or dashboard removal and installation, damaging the wire insulation and causing the wire to contact metal body parts.
- 4Airbag module internal fault: Damaged insulation on the igniter bridge wire inside the front passenger airbag assembly shorts the ignition terminal to the airbag metal housing (ground). This condition typically indicates a history of moisture ingress into the airbag assembly.
- 5Rodent damage: During prolonged outdoor or warehouse parking, rodents chew through the wiring harness insulation, exposing the copper core and causing it to contact the vehicle body ground.
- 1Safety preparation and diagnostic confirmation: Disconnect the battery negative terminal and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS capacitor. Use a diagnostic tool to read freeze frame data and confirm vehicle conditions at the time of the fault (temperature, vehicle speed, etc.). Check for accompanying fault codes (such as B1610, B1612).
- 2Visual inspection and connector check: Remove the lower trim panel under the front passenger glovebox. Inspect the yellow SRS connector (usually marked F-PAB) for signs of water ingress, corrosion, or bent pins. Measure the resistance from the connector terminals to ground. Normal resistance is greater than 10 MΩ.
- 3Harness circuit check: Test harness continuity from the SRS ECU to the front passenger airbag. Focus on sections passing through the instrument panel Cross Car Beam and the floor harness protective sleeve. Use an endoscope to inspect the harness for wear at metal edges.
- 4Airbag module test: Replace the front passenger airbag with a dedicated airbag simulator (2Ω load). Clear the fault code and power on again. If the fault code disappears, the airbag assembly has an internal short circuit. Replace the front passenger airbag module.
- 5Repair and verification: Repair the damaged wiring harness (insulate with double-layer heat-shrink tubing). Re-secure the wiring harness, maintaining a clearance of more than 20mm from metal components. Apply conductive paste and reconnect all connectors. Connect the battery. Use the diagnostic tool to execute 'System Configuration' and 'Sensor Calibration'. Finally, perform a collision simulation test to verify fault resolution.
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