DTC B175B1A indicates the right rear side airbag igniter circuit resistance falls below the normal ECU threshold (typically below 1 — Atto 8
DTC B175B1A indicates the right rear side airbag igniter circuit resistance falls below the normal ECU threshold (typically below 1.0 Ω).
In the BYD SRS (Supplemental Restraint System), standard airbag igniter resistance is generally 2.0–3.0 Ω.
If the ECU continuously detects abnormally low circuit resistance, it logs a short circuit fault (indicating a possible short to ground or internal igniter short circuit).
This fault causes the following: 1) The airbag may fail to deploy during a collision, resulting in a loss of side protection. 2) The airbag may deploy unexpectedly in extreme cases. 3) The SRS enters fail-safe mode and illuminates the airbag warning light.
Common causes include wiring harness wear, connector water ingress, or an internal airbag module short circuit.
- 1Right rear side airbag module internal igniter short circuit (internal bridge wire short circuit or moisture ingress)
- 2Wiring harness wear causing a short to ground (commonly chafed near the seat track or pinched inside the C-pillar trim)
- 3Water ingress into the connector or terminal corrosion (vehicle wading, rear floor water ingress, or moisture intrusion into the connector after a car wash)
- 4SRS control unit internal detection circuit fault (abnormal ECU sampling resistor or detection chip)
- 5Wiring harness damaged during modification or repair (e.g., piercing the harness when retrofitting seat heating or upgrading to leather seats).
- 1Use the BYD VDS diagnostic tool to read fault codes, confirm B175B1A is a current fault, record freeze frame data, and check for accompanying SRS fault codes (such as B175C).
- 2Perform the safe power-off procedure: disconnect the battery negative terminal and wait at least 3 minutes to fully discharge the SRS capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 3Check the right rear side airbag wiring harness connector (usually located below the C-pillar or on the side of the rear seat) for looseness, backed-out pins, water ingress, or white corrosion. Clean and apply conductive grease if necessary.
- 4Disconnect the SRS ECU connector (located under the center console or in the front compartment) and use a multimeter to measure the resistance at the right rear side airbag wiring harness terminal. Normal resistance is 2-3Ω. A reading close to 0Ω or <1Ω confirms a short circuit.
- 5Inspect the wiring harness in sections: disconnect and measure the circuit from the ECU to the airbag. Check the wiring harness for abrasion, damaged insulation, or crushing deformation, specifically at the seat rail mounting points, inside the B-pillar trim panel, and inside the C-pillar trim panel.
- 6Remove the right rear side airbag module (requires removing the C-pillar trim panel or seat backrest). Directly measure the resistance across the two terminals of the airbag module. If the resistance is <1Ω, replace the airbag module.
- 7Repair the short circuit (tape the wiring harness or replace the connector) or replace the faulty airbag module. Secure all connections to prevent poor contact.
- 8Reconnect the battery, clear the fault code, and perform the SRS system self-test (turn the ignition switch ON and verify the airbag warning lamp turns off after 6 seconds). Perform a road test to verify.
Steering wheel cruise control switch failure (B17 series reference)
VCU communication interrupted (pin backed out)