DTC B17301A indicates the Supplemental Restraint System (SRS) detected a resistance of 0 ohms in the left middle-row (second-row left-side) side airbag module firing circuit, indicating a hard short circuit — Atto 8
DTC B17301A indicates the Supplemental Restraint System (SRS) detected a resistance of 0 ohms in the left middle-row (second-row left-side) side airbag module firing circuit, indicating a hard short circuit.
Normal airbag squib resistance is between 2.0 Ω and 4.0 Ω.
A resistance of 0 ohms indicates current passes directly through the circuit without load.
Possible causes include an internal short circuit in the airbag ignition wire, a wiring harness short to ground, a short circuit between connector terminals, or a fault in the SRS control unit (ACU) internal detection circuit.
Upon detecting this fault, the ACU immediately illuminates the airbag warning lamp and disables the left middle-row side airbag to prevent accidental deployment from the short circuit.
Consequently, the airbag will fail to deploy during a collision, posing a severe safety hazard.
- 1Left middle-row side airbag module internal igniter short circuit: Moisture, aging, overload, or manufacturing defects break down the insulation between the positive and negative terminals of the airbag igniter wire, creating a short circuit.
- 2Seat wiring harness chafed and shorted to ground: During middle-row seat fore/aft sliding or backrest angle adjustment, the airbag wiring harness chafes against the seat frame, slide rail, or spring, damaging the insulation and shorting to the vehicle body ground.
- 3Connector fault: Water ingress, bent pins, dislodged terminals, foreign object ingress, or oxidation in the yellow airbag-specific connector (usually fitted with a shorting bar) located under the seat or inside the C-pillar trim panel causes a short circuit between terminals.
- 4Internal fault in the SRS control unit (ACU): A damaged ACU crash sensor interface circuit or ignition driver circuit triggers a false short-circuit fault (external wiring is normal).
- 5Improper modification or repair: During seat removal and installation, leather reupholstering, or installation of seat cushions or floor mats, retaining clips or cable ties crush or pierce the airbag wiring harness, causing a short circuit.
- 1Safety preparation: Switch the vehicle OFF, disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS system energy storage capacitor to prevent accidental airbag deployment and personal injury.
- 2Fault confirmation: Use the VDS2000 or Launch X431 diagnostic tool to read the fault code. Confirm B17301A is a current (Active) fault, not a history fault. Record the resistance value and ambient temperature from the freeze frame data.
- 3Visual inspection: Inspect the side of the left middle-row seat (second row, left side) for signs of impact, water ingress, or modification. Check the airbag marking location (usually on the side of the seatback or C-pillar).
- 4Connector inspection: Remove the seat side trim panel or lower C-pillar trim panel, locate the yellow dedicated airbag connector (usually containing a shorting bar/shorting spring), and check for looseness, water ingress, oxidation, or bent or deformed pins.
- 5Resistance measurement: Disconnect the airbag module connector and use a multimeter to measure the resistance on the airbag module side (standard value: 2.0-4.0Ω). If the multimeter reads 0Ω or close to 0Ω, the airbag module has an internal short circuit. Replace the module.
- 6Wiring harness insulation check: If the airbag module resistance is normal, measure the resistance to ground on the wiring harness side (expected: infinite). If continuity exists (0Ω), the wiring harness is shorted to ground. Trace the circuit to locate the fault, focusing on wear points at the seat slide rails, hinges, and mounting brackets.
- 7Shorting bar function test: Inspect the connector shorting bar for binding or deformation. Verify the shorting bar reliably short-circuits the terminals when disconnecting the plug (to prevent accidental deployment from static electricity) and springs fully open when connecting the plug.
- 8Repair and replacement: Repair the damaged wiring harness (use heat-shrink tubing for double-layer insulation or replace the entire harness), or replace the faulty airbag module. Note: When replacing the airbag module, record the old and new part numbers. Some models require coding.
- 9System reset: Reconnect all connectors, connect the battery, clear the fault code using the diagnostic tool, and perform an SRS system self-diagnosis (including circuit resistance monitoring and system check).
- 10Function check: Verify the instrument cluster airbag warning lamp turns off after the self-check (approximately 6 seconds). Read the data stream to confirm the left middle-row side airbag resistance returns to the normal range of 2.0-4.0Ω. Perform a seat forward and backward adjustment test to confirm no interference.
Worn wiring harness on middle row seat caused short circuit in Song MAX
Qin EV left middle row side airbag module internal short circuit
Song DM: Oxidised connector under seat causing short circuit
Aftermarket seat modification crushed airbag wiring harness on Han EV
e5 450 wiring harness improperly secured, chafed and shorted