This DTC indicates the airbag control unit (SRS ECU) detects an open circuit or abnormal resistance in the front passenger seat belt pretensioner circuit — Atto 8
This DTC indicates the airbag control unit (SRS ECU) detects an open circuit or abnormal resistance in the front passenger seat belt pretensioner circuit.
Specifically, the ECU continuously monitors the pretensioner deployment circuit resistance via an internal bridge circuit (standard range: 1.6–3.0 Ω).
The ECU triggers DTC B164A-00 if it detects a resistance >6 Ω (open circuit) or <1 Ω (short circuit), or a communication interruption with the pretensioner.
As an active safety device, the pretensioner uses a pyrotechnic gas generator to generate tension within approximately 15 milliseconds of a collision, instantly retracting the seat belt webbing to eliminate slack against the occupant.
This fault indicates complete failure of this protective function.
Per the BYD SRS safety strategy, the system may enter a degraded mode (e.g., disabling side or curtain airbags), significantly increasing the risk of injury to the front passenger during a collision.
- 1Loose or poor contact at the dedicated yellow SRS connector under the front passenger seat (most common; frequent forward and backward seat adjustment causes the plug to loosen or partially disconnect).
- 2Long-term fatigue of the pretensioner wiring harness at the seat slide rail bend breaks the internal copper strands (outer insulation remains intact but the core wire breaks, creating an intermittent open circuit).
- 3Open circuit in the seat belt pretensioner internal resistance wire (aging, moisture ingress, or previous collision impact causing an internal break in the pyrotechnic unit)
- 4Liquid ingress under the seat during vehicle wading or interior cleaning causes oxidation and corrosion of the SRS connector pins, increasing contact resistance.
- 5Accidental disconnection of the SRS wiring during non-professional retrofitting of seat heating/ventilation or seat cover replacement, causing terminal deformation, terminal back-out, or a crushed and damaged wiring harness.
- 1Safety preparation and initial diagnosis: Disconnect the negative battery terminal for 3 minutes to discharge residual system voltage. Use a dedicated BYD diagnostic tool (VDS or X-431) to read freeze frame data. Record the vehicle speed and seat position at the time of the fault. Clear the fault code and test drive the vehicle to determine if the fault is intermittent.
- 2Visually inspect the connector: Move the front passenger seat to the rearmost position and inspect the yellow dedicated SRS connector under the seat (usually with a red locking tab). Confirm the plug is fully inserted and the locking clip is engaged. Check inside the plug for water ingress, oxidation, or foreign matter.
- 3Measure pretensioner resistance: Disconnect the connector. Use a multimeter to measure the resistance between the two terminals on the pretensioner side. Standard value: 1.6-3.0 Ω (at room temperature). If the multimeter displays infinity (OL) or resistance >10 Ω, this indicates a faulty pretensioner unit. Replace the front passenger seat belt assembly (the pretensioner usually integrates with the seat belt retractor; do not replace it separately).
- 4Harness continuity test: Measure harness continuity between the under-seat connector and the SRS ECU (usually beneath the centre tunnel). Closely inspect the harness bends at the seat slide rails. Repair or replace the harness if the circuit is open. Also measure the harness insulation resistance to ground and power to rule out a short circuit.
- 5Check earth connection and ECU: Verify the SRS ECU earth point (usually located on the dashboard crossmember or under the centre tunnel) is secure. Earth resistance must be <1Ω. If all above checks are normal, suspect an internal SRS ECU fault. Replace the control unit and perform coding and matching.
- 6System reset and verification: Reconnect all components and turn on the power. Use the diagnostic tool to perform 'SRS system configuration' or 'seat position learning' (if applicable). Clear the fault codes. Perform static and dynamic tests. Confirm the airbag warning light turns off and the system has no fault codes.
Seat adjustment dislodged the connector on the Qin EV300.
Wiring harness fatigue fracture at Qin 80 seat rail
Connector corrosion on Qin EV450 after water wading.
Aftermarket seat heater installation accidentally damaged SRS wiring
Internal resistance wire of pretensioner aged, causing an open circuit