DTC B172B1B indicates the Supplemental Restraint System (SRS) detected a communication loss between the left middle-row (second-row left-side) side airbag module and the SRS control unit (ACU) — Atto 8
DTC B172B1B indicates the Supplemental Restraint System (SRS) detected a communication loss between the left middle-row (second-row left-side) side airbag module and the SRS control unit (ACU).
This fault indicates an open airbag module circuit with resistance exceeding the threshold (typically >10Ω), preventing the control unit from detecting the module.
Possible causes include a disconnected physical connector, broken wiring harness, faulty internal spiral cable (clock spring), or an open circuit within the module itself.
Because the SRS uses a dual-stage deployment circuit, this fault prevents the left middle-row side airbag from deploying during a collision.
It may also trigger a system self-check lockout, affecting the entire side airbag system.
- 1Airbag wiring harness connector under the seat or inside the B-pillar trim panel is loose, disconnected, or has poor contact, commonly resulting from frequent seat adjustment or failing to securely clip the B-pillar trim after removal and installation.
- 2Wiring harness fatigue fracture, especially in harnesses routed through the seat frame or near the door hinge, where long-term bending and pinching break the internal copper strands while the outer insulation remains intact.
- 3Internal airbag module open circuit; abnormal internal squib resistance (open circuit or excessive resistance). Module aging, previous moisture exposure, or electrostatic discharge usually causes this fault.
- 4Corrosion or poor contact at the SRS control unit (ACU) pins prevents the ACU from correctly reading the left middle-row side airbag circuit resistance.
- 5Excessively long seat frame mounting bolts or interior trim panel clips crush the wiring harness, causing a short to ground that blows the fuse or physically severs the circuit.
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Locate the module: Remove the left middle-row seat side trim panel or lower B-pillar trim panel, and locate the side airbag module (usually marked 'SIDE AIRBAG') and its dedicated yellow connector.
- 3Visual inspection: Verify the connector is fully locked. Inspect the pins for oxidation, backed-out pins, or signs of water ingress. Confirm the wiring harness has no damage, crushing, or breaks.
- 4Resistance measurement: Use a multimeter to measure the airbag module terminal resistance. The normal value is 2.0-3.0 Ω. Infinite resistance indicates an internal open circuit in the module. Disconnect the module and measure at the wiring harness terminal to verify continuity (<1 Ω) between the SRS ECU and the module, and confirm proper insulation to ground and power supply.
- 5Fault isolation: If the wiring harness is normal, connect a 3Ω substitute resistor to the wiring harness end. Clear the fault code. If the fault code does not reappear, replace the airbag module. If the fault persists, check the SRS control unit and wiring harness continuity.
- 6Reset test: After repair, reconnect all components and connect the battery. Use the diagnostic tool to clear the fault code and perform the 'Airbag System Dynamic Test'. Confirm B172B1B does not recur and the system status displays 'Normal'.
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