This DTC indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) detects the front passenger-side seat belt pretensioner squib resistance exceeds the system calibration threshold (typically >4Ω or near open circuit) — Atto 8
This DTC indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) detects the front passenger-side seat belt pretensioner squib resistance exceeds the system calibration threshold (typically >4Ω or near open circuit).
The pretensioner is a critical component of the airbag system.
During a collision, it fires a pyrotechnic charge to rapidly tighten the seat belt and eliminate slack between the occupant and the belt.
High resistance indicates the ECU may fail to supply sufficient current to deploy the pretensioner during a collision.
This deprives the front passenger of pretensioner protection and increases injury risk.
This is a hard fault.
The SRS warning lamp remains illuminated and the system enters degraded mode.
- 1Loose pretensioner connector plug, oxidized terminals, or water ingress corrosion causing increased contact resistance (common after water wading or vehicle washing).
- 2Aging, moisture ingress, or a partial open circuit in the seat belt pretensioner internal igniter increases internal resistance (the pretensioner is a single-use component; resistance drifts after aging).
- 3A hidden open circuit, a partial break in the copper core, or a poor crimp connection in the wiring causes abnormally high circuit resistance (common in accident-repaired vehicles or crushed wiring harnesses).
- 4Wiring harness under the front passenger seat worn or broken due to frequent seat adjustment (for models with seat-integrated pretensioners; some Qin PRO configurations use this design).
- 5SRS control unit (ACU) internal detection circuit fault or abnormal sampling resistor (less common; confirm after ruling out external wiring).
- 1Safe power-down: Turn off the ignition switch, disconnect the negative battery terminal, and wrap it with insulating tape. Wait at least 90 seconds to ensure the SRS capacitor discharges completely and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Visual inspection: Inspect the dedicated yellow pretensioner connector below the front passenger B-pillar (or on the outer side of the seat) for looseness, backed-out terminals, oxidation, or water ingress. Inspect the wiring harness sleeve for damage.
- 3Resistance measurement: Disconnect the pretensioner connector. Use a digital multimeter to measure the resistance between the two pretensioner terminals (standard value: 2.0-3.0Ω). If the measured value is >4Ω or displays OL (open circuit), the pretensioner unit is faulty.
- 4Wiring harness continuity test: Measure circuit continuity between the pretensioner connector and the corresponding SRS control unit pin (<1Ω), and measure harness insulation to ground (>1MΩ) to check for high resistance or short circuits.
- 5Fault isolation: If pretensioner resistance is normal, check for spread or bent connector pins. Use the special tool to restore pin contact pressure. Replace the connector or repair the wiring harness if necessary.
- 6Component replacement: After confirming a pretensioner fault, replace the front passenger seat belt pretensioner assembly (Qin PRO models usually require replacing the complete seat belt retractor assembly). Never use a multimeter to directly measure pretensioner resistance beyond the specified time (to prevent accidental deployment).
- 7System Reset and Verification: Connect the battery. Clear the fault code using the BYD dedicated diagnostic tool (ED400/ED600). Execute "SRS system self-diagnosis" and "pretensioner resistance learning" (if supported). Verify DTC B16511B does not return and the airbag warning light turns off.
Oxidized B-pillar connector caused high contact resistance.
Seat adjustment chafes pretensioner harness, causing high resistance
After accident repair, resistance drift from pretensioner internal aging
Connector corroded by water ingress after wading.