DTC B163C1B indicates the front passenger side airbag igniter circuit resistance exceeds the normal threshold (typically 2 — Atto 8
DTC B163C1B indicates the front passenger side airbag igniter circuit resistance exceeds the normal threshold (typically 2.0–3.0 Ω).
The system triggers this fault upon detecting resistance > 6 Ω or an open circuit.
This fault falls under the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) passive safety category, specifically indicating a high-resistance fault in the front passenger seat-mounted side airbag or curtain airbag electrical circuit.
High resistance indicates poor circuit contact, a broken wiring harness, an oxidized connector, or an open airbag igniter.
This condition may prevent proper airbag deployment during a collision, constituting a safety-related functional fault.
- 1Loose or oxidized airbag wiring harness connector under the front passenger seat: Qin PRO series seats feature electric adjustment. Frequent fore-and-aft movement causes the yellow airbag connector under the seat (usually located on the inner side of the seat rail) to loosen, terminals to back out, or pins to oxidize, increasing contact resistance.
- 2Clock spring (spiral cable) internal open circuit: Although the clock spring under the steering wheel primarily connects the driver-side airbag, some models route the passenger-side airbag signal through it. Fatigue fracture of the internal flat cable causes abnormal circuit resistance.
- 3Airbag igniter internal open circuit: The internal igniter resistance wire in the front passenger side airbag module (integrated into the side of the seat backrest) broke due to aging, or poor welding in the production batch caused resistance drift.
- 4Wiring harness wear/open circuit: Long-term friction against the seat frame edge or inside the B-pillar trim partially breaks the copper wires, creating a high-resistance condition without completely disconnecting.
- 5SRS control module (ACU) internal sampling circuit fault: A faulty internal A/D converter or voltage divider resistor in the control module causes a false high resistance reading, while the actual external circuit is normal.
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the battery negative terminal and wait at least 3 minutes to discharge residual charge from the system capacitors. Use a multimeter to confirm the SRS system voltage is 0V. Wear an anti-static wrist strap.
- 2Read data stream: Access the SRS system using the BYD VDS2000/VDS3000 diagnostic tool. Read the B163C1B freeze frame data, check the current resistance value (typically >10Ω or displaying 'open circuit'), and verify the fault status (current/history).
- 3Visually inspect the seat wiring harness: Remove the front passenger seat (4 retaining bolts, torque 25Nm). Inspect the yellow dedicated connector (2-pin or 4-pin) under the seat. Check for looseness, water ingress, oxidation, or terminal back-out. Use a dedicated probe to test the connector contact pressure.
- 4Resistance measurement: Use a dedicated fused airbag test lead (to prevent electrostatic deployment). Disconnect the airbag connector and measure the airbag inflator resistance (standard: 2.0 ± 0.3 Ω). If >5 Ω, replace the airbag module. Measure the wiring harness continuity from the seat connector to the SRS control module; resistance must be <1 Ω.
- 5Check the clock spring (if applicable): Remove the steering wheel and check continuity of the clock spring passenger-side circuit. If the circuit is open, replace the clock spring (align the centering marks during installation).
- 6Repair and verification: Clean the oxidized connector (using electrical contact cleaner). If necessary, replace the connector or repair the wiring harness (solder + heat-shrink tubing). Restore the connection and clear the fault code. Perform 3 ignition cycle self-checks to confirm the fault code does not return. Finally, perform an airbag system simulated deployment test (use a dedicated tool in place of the airbag to verify circuit integrity).
Oxidised seat connector caused intermittent high resistance on Qin Pro DM
Open circuit in passenger-side airbag module internal igniter.
Worn B-pillar wiring harness caused resistance drift.
SRS control module false positive