DTC B164C indicates an unintended electrical connection between the front passenger-side seat belt pretensioner control circuit and the vehicle power supply (B+) — Atto 8
DTC B164C indicates an unintended electrical connection between the front passenger-side seat belt pretensioner control circuit and the vehicle power supply (B+).
The seat belt pretensioner is a key actuator in the SRS system and contains a pyrotechnic device.
Under normal conditions, the airbag ECU triggers the pretensioner only during a collision via a low-level signal.
A short to power continuously exposes the pretensioner supply or control circuit to 12V.
This fails the system self-check, illuminates the SRS warning lamp, and creates a severe safety risk: the short-circuit current may accidentally trigger the pretensioner (instantly and permanently locking the seat belt), or circuit protection mechanisms may prevent proper pretensioner deployment during a collision.
Repair this hard short-circuit fault immediately to ensure full passive safety system functionality.
- 1Mechanical wear of the under-seat wiring harness: Frequent fore/aft movement of the front passenger seat or crushing by objects damages the pretensioner wiring harness insulation, causing it to contact the seat frame or power harness and create a short circuit.
- 2Connector water ingress or corrosion: Spilled drinks, improper car washing, or wading causes a short circuit in the pretensioner connector internal terminals (usually located below the B-pillar or under the seat), or metal terminal oxidation causes electrochemical migration.
- 3Pretensioner internal coil insulation failure: Aging, overheating, or manufacturing defects damage the pretensioner internal squib coil insulation layer, causing the coil to short to the housing (ground) or power wire.
- 4Improper repair work: failure to reinstall wiring harness retaining clips during previous interior trim removal and installation, seat repair, or carpet cleaning caused the seat slide rail to crush the wiring harness or retaining screws to pierce the insulation.
- 5SRS ECU internal drive circuit fault: Pretensioner drive MOSFET or capacitor breakdown inside the airbag control module causes the output terminal to continuously deliver supply voltage instead of the normal low-level control signal.
- 1Safe power-down and wait: Turn the power switch to OFF, disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds (to fully discharge the SRS capacitor and prevent accidental deployment).
- 2Fault status confirmation: Reconnect the diagnostic tool, read the Freeze Frame data, confirm B164C is an Active fault rather than a historical fault, and record the vehicle status at the time of the fault.
- 3Visual and physical inspection: Remove the front passenger seat (if necessary) and carefully inspect the wiring harness under the seat, at the bottom of the B-pillar, and along the floor. Check the harness for wear, cuts, or burn marks, and inspect connector KJ10 (or the corresponding model-specific connector) for water ingress, corrosion, terminal back-out, or foreign matter.
- 4Circuit parameter measurement: Disconnect the front passenger seat belt pretensioner connector. Use a multimeter to measure the voltage from the harness-side terminal to ground (normal: <1V; a 12V reading confirms a short to power). Measure the resistance from the terminal to power (normal: >1MΩ). Measure the pretensioner body resistance (normal: 2.0–3.0Ω; a reading <1Ω or infinite indicates an internal short or open circuit).
- 5Wiring harness insulation repair: If the wiring harness is damaged, wrap it in layers using heat-shrink tubing or insulating tape. Maintain a safe distance from vehicle body metal and power cables. If the wiring harness shows wear at the seat slide rail, reroute the harness and install a protective corrugated conduit.
- 6Component replacement and verification: If the pretensioner has an internal short circuit, replace the front passenger seat belt pretensioner assembly (replace the seat belt assembly or pretensioner module simultaneously). If the fault persists after repairing the wiring harness, measure the output voltage at the SRS ECU terminal. If abnormal, replace the airbag control module.
- 7System reset and self-check: Restore all connections, connect the battery, and set the power mode to ON (do not start). Wait 20 seconds for the SRS system to perform a self-check, and confirm the fault light turns off. Use a diagnostic tool to clear the fault code, and perform a collision simulation test (using a dedicated resistor substitute) to verify system function.
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