DTC B1742 indicates an abnormal short circuit between the left rear side airbag ignition loop (typically installed in the left rear seat backrest or C-pillar) and the vehicle power supply positive (B+) — Atto 8
DTC B1742 indicates an abnormal short circuit between the left rear side airbag ignition loop (typically installed in the left rear seat backrest or C-pillar) and the vehicle power supply positive (B+).
In the Supplemental Restraint System (SRS), the airbag module connects to the Airbag Control Unit (ACU) via two wires.
Normal wiring harness resistance measures approximately 2-3 ohms.
The diagnostic system triggers this fault code upon detecting a short to power in this circuit (voltage approaching 12V battery voltage instead of the normal low-voltage signal).
This fault is extremely dangerous.
The short circuit can cause unexpected airbag deployment while driving, severely injuring occupants.
Furthermore, the system enters protection mode and disables the airbag, preventing inflation during a collision and eliminating side-impact protection.
Additionally, the SRS illuminates the instrument cluster airbag warning light and may lock the entire airbag system, disabling all airbags.
- 1Wiring harness insulation wear under the seat or inside the B-pillar/C-pillar: Frequent fore/aft seat adjustment or friction during passenger entry/exit damages the airbag wiring harness insulation, causing the wire core to directly contact the metal vehicle frame or power circuits.
- 2Water ingress or corrosion in the under-seat connector: Spilled drinks, water seepage during car washing, or vehicle wading creates a conductive path or electrolytic corrosion between the airbag connector terminals, causing a short circuit between the pins.
- 3Airbag module internal fault: Insulation failure of the igniter (Squib) inside the airbag inflator causing a short circuit between the bridgewire and housing, or an internal circuit board fault.
- 4SRS control unit (ACU) internal drive circuit damaged: The airbag drive transistor or related circuit inside the control unit breaks down, resulting in a continuous high-level output at the terminal.
- 5Harness damage caused by aftermarket modifications: fixing screws pierce the harness or metal edges pinch the harness when installing seat covers, seat heating pads, routing dash cam wiring, or modifying audio systems.
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal and wait at least 90 seconds (some models require 3 minutes) to fully discharge the SRS backup power supply and prevent accidental airbag deployment during repair.
- 2Fault confirmation and freeze frame retrieval: Use a dedicated diagnostic tool (such as BYD VDS2000/3000) to read the complete fault codes and freeze frame data. Record the vehicle status when the fault occurred (vehicle speed, temperature, etc.) and confirm whether the fault is intermittent.
- 3Visual and wiring harness inspection: Inspect the wiring harness in the left rear seat side airbag area (typically on the left side of the seat backrest) for obvious damage, crushing, or burn marks; inspect the yellow SRS connector under the seat for looseness, water ingress, or foreign objects.
- 4Electrical measurement and isolation diagnosis: Disconnect the airbag module connector. Use a multimeter to measure the resistance/voltage between both terminals on the harness-side connector and body ground, and to the 12V power supply. Determine whether the short circuit is on the harness side or the module side. Measure the resistance between the two terminals of the airbag module and from each terminal to the housing (normal values are greater than 1MΩ to power/ground, and 2-3Ω between terminals).
- 5Section-by-section troubleshooting: If the wiring harness has a short to power, sequentially disconnect the intermediate connectors (typically located under the B-pillar or seat) from the ACU to the airbag module. Measure each section to pinpoint the short circuit.
- 6Component replacement and repair: Based on diagnostic results, replace the damaged airbag module, repair the damaged wiring harness (use high-temperature wire of the same specification and apply double insulation), or replace the SRS control unit. Never wrap the SRS wiring harness with standard electrical tape.
- 7System verification: Reconnect all connectors, connect the battery, use the diagnostic tool to clear the fault code, and execute the SRS system self-check. Perform a dynamic test (simulate the full seat adjustment range) to confirm the fault does not recur. Verify the instrument panel airbag warning light turns off after 6 seconds.
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