This DTC indicates the Airbag Control Unit (ACU) detects an open circuit or abnormal resistance in the driver-side seat belt pretensioner circuit — Atto 8
This DTC indicates the Airbag Control Unit (ACU) detects an open circuit or abnormal resistance in the driver-side seat belt pretensioner circuit.
The pretensioner contains a squib and a resistance wire; normal resistance typically measures 2.0-3.0Ω.
The ACU triggers B1640-00 when it detects infinite resistance (open circuit) in the pretensioner circuit or when the resistance remains outside the threshold range for a specified time.
During a collision, this fault may prevent the driver-side seat belt pretensioner from deploying and tightening, severely compromising occupant restraint protection.
The fault also forces the SRS system into a degraded protection mode and continuously illuminates the airbag warning light.
- 1Dedicated yellow airbag connector under the seat (usually located on the inboard side of the seat track) is loose, oxidized, or has recessed pins, causing poor contact or an open circuit.
- 2Open circuit inside the seat belt pretensioner unit, mostly due to an open igniter circuit or burnt internal coil. Common causes include vehicle water ingress, failure to replace a deployed pretensioner, or end of service life.
- 3Broken pretensioner wiring harness wire in the transition area between the seat frame and the body (inside the seat outer trim panel or floor harness corrugated conduit) due to long-term bending and wear.
- 4On some models, the driver seat occupancy sensor (OCS) and pretensioner share a wiring harness connector. Poor connector contact interferes with pretensioner circuit detection.
- 5Airbag Control Unit (ACU) internal drive circuit fault or connector pin corrosion causes abnormal detection voltage in the pretensioner circuit.
- 1Safe power-down: Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS system capacitors and prevent accidental airbag deployment during repair.
- 2Visual inspection: Verify the yellow dedicated connector under the driver's seat (marked AIRBAG or SRS) is fully locked. Inspect the inside of the connector for water stains, green copper corrosion, backed-out pins, or deformed pins.
- 3Resistance measurement: Disconnect the ACU connector to avoid damaging the module. Use a multimeter to measure the resistance between the pretensioner plug terminals. The standard value is 2.0-3.0Ω. If the reading shows OL (open circuit) or <1Ω (short circuit), further inspect the wiring harness or replace the pretensioner.
- 4Harness continuity test: Carefully inspect the corrugated harness conduit on the outer side of the seat rail and at the floor pass-through. Strip back the conduit and check for wire fatigue fractures resulting from frequent forward and backward seat movement. Repair the harness if necessary and re-wrap with abrasion-resistant tape.
- 5Replacement verification: If harness continuity is normal, test using a known-good pretensioner or seat belt assembly. If the fault code clears, the pretensioner is faulty. Replace the driver seat belt assembly (including the pretensioner mechanism).
- 6System reset: Reconnect all connectors and restore battery power. Use the BYD dedicated diagnostic tool (VDS) to clear fault codes. Perform the SRS system self-diagnosis and pass the crash sensor simulation test. Confirm the fault light turns off and the system has no current fault codes.
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