In DTC B172D12, "B" indicates the Body/Safety system, "172D" identifies the Left Middle Row Side Airbag, and "12" indicates a Short to B+ — Atto 8
In DTC B172D12, "B" indicates the Body/Safety system, "172D" identifies the Left Middle Row Side Airbag, and "12" indicates a Short to B+.
This fault indicates the airbag control unit (SRS ECU) detects abnormal continuity between the Left Middle Row Side Airbag squib circuit and the vehicle power supply (12V).
Under normal conditions, the airbag squib resistance is approximately 1.5-3.0Ω.
The SRS ECU monitors circuit current and voltage through the low-side or high-side driver circuit.
When the ECU detects circuit voltage continuously exceeding the threshold (typically >5V and approaching battery voltage), it identifies a short to B+.
This fault prevents normal airbag deployment (causing failure to deploy or unintended deployment during a collision).
As a hard fault, it triggers a continuous SRS warning light, forces the system into fail-safe mode, and disables the affected airbag function.
- 1Wiring harness wear near the seat slide rail: Forward and backward adjustment of the left middle-row seat causes the airbag wiring harness to rub against the seat frame or slide rail edge. Prolonged friction damages the insulation, allowing internal wires to contact a power wire (such as the seat heating supply or a constant power wire) and cause a short circuit.
- 2Airbag module connector fault: Backed-out connector terminals, oxidation from water ingress, or bent pins shorting the squib terminal to the power supply terminal. Common after vehicle wading or washing.
- 3Airbag squib internal short circuit: Insulation breakdown of the gas generator squib inside the airbag module shorts the resistance wire to the housing (excluding ground) or power supply. Internal module quality issues or previous impact damage usually cause this.
- 4Improper SRS wiring harness modification or accident repair: installing aftermarket seat ventilation/heating equipment pierces the airbag wiring harness, or improperly securing the harness after accident repairs causes seat bolts or metal brackets to pinch the harness.
- 5SRS control unit internal driver chip fault: Breakdown of the ECU internal squib driver transistor causes the output terminal to remain high, triggering a false external short circuit detection (uncommon but requires inspection).
- 1Safety preparation: Turn off the ignition, disconnect the low-voltage battery negative terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Fault Confirmation: Connect the BYD VDS diagnostic tool. Read the complete DTC information and freeze frame data (record vehicle speed, temperature, etc., at the time of the fault). Confirm B172D12 is a current fault (Active), not a history fault.
- 3Visual inspection: Remove the left middle-row seat (or left B-pillar lower trim panel, depending on vehicle configuration) and inspect the airbag module connector (usually located under the seat or near the C-pillar) for looseness, water ingress, corrosion, or obvious damage.
- 4Circuit test: Disconnect the airbag module connector and use a multimeter to measure the voltage to ground at the harness-side (vehicle-side) connector terminal. Normal voltage is 0-1V (low-side drive) or close to 0V; if the multimeter reads 12V, confirm a short to power.
- 5Harness inspection: Follow the airbag harness routing (typically under the seat, along the B-pillar, and through the floor harness channel) and check the insulation for damage. Inspect the seat mounting bolts, seat rail edges, and harness retaining clips for signs of pinching or abrasion.
- 6Isolation test: If the wiring harness appears normal, disconnect the SRS ECU connector and measure the insulation resistance between the airbag wiring harness and the power wire. Resistance must be greater than 10MΩ. If the resistance is too low, strip the harness in sections to locate the short circuit.
- 7Component verification: If the wiring harness is normal, measure the airbag module resistance (1.5-3.0 Ω). If the resistance is abnormal (<1 Ω or >5 Ω) or a continuity test indicates a short to the housing, replace the left middle-row side airbag module.
- 8Repair Verification: After repairing the wiring harness (replacing the damaged section or rewrapping) or replacing the module, reconnect all connectors and the battery. Use VDS to clear the fault code. Perform the 'SRS System Self-Diagnosis' and 'Output Test'. Confirm B172D12 does not return and the warning lamp turns off.
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