DTC B177A1B indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System/airbag system) control module detects an open circuit or resistance exceeding the normal threshold (typically >6Ω or infinite) in the left middle-row seat belt pretensioner circuit — Atto 8
DTC B177A1B indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System/airbag system) control module detects an open circuit or resistance exceeding the normal threshold (typically >6Ω or infinite) in the left middle-row seat belt pretensioner circuit.
The '1B' sub-code in the BYD diagnostic system typically indicates excessive circuit resistance or an open circuit, causing the ECU to determine the pretensioner is 'not present' or has lost communication.
This fault prevents the system from triggering the left middle-row seat belt pretensioner pyrotechnic device during a collision, increasing occupant forward travel and reducing crash protection.
The system illuminates the instrument cluster airbag fault warning light (SRS light) and may disable the deployment logic for the corresponding side airbag or curtain airbag.
- 1Left middle row seat belt pretensioner connector loose, terminal backed out, or poor contact (often results from seat removal for repair, failure to reconnect after carpet cleaning, or passenger kicking)
- 2Pretensioner gas generator internal open circuit (internal igniter open circuit due to component aging, moisture ingress, or impact)
- 3Wiring harness beneath the seat slide rail or B-pillar worn or broken (long-term fore/aft seat adjustment causes harness fatigue, or metal edges cut the insulation).
- 4Water ingress or high humidity causes connector terminal corrosion and oxidation, resulting in high resistance or an open circuit.
- 5SRS control module internal detection circuit fault (false alarm due to outdated software, lost calibration data, or damaged hardware sampling circuit)
- 1Use the genuine BYD diagnostic tool (VDS2000/3000) to read the complete fault codes and freeze frame data. Confirm the environmental conditions when the fault occurred (temperature, vehicle speed, etc.) and distinguish between current and history faults.
- 2Perform safety procedure: Disconnect the negative battery terminal and wait at least 3 minutes (5 minutes on some models) to fully discharge the SRS system energy storage capacitor to prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 3Locate the left middle-row seat belt pretensioner (usually integrated into the seat belt retractor or below the B-pillar). Visually inspect the connector (usually marked in yellow) for looseness, backed-out pins, water ingress, or oxidation.
- 4Use a multimeter to measure the resistance between the pretensioner terminals. Standard value: 1.8Ω-3.5Ω. If the reading is infinity (OL) or >6Ω, confirm an open circuit in the pretensioner body or wiring.
- 5Disconnect the pretensioner connector and measure continuity between the wiring harness side and the SRS ECU. Specifically inspect the seat slide rail mounting points, wear points on the wiring harness corrugated conduit, and body floor wiring harness clips.
- 6If the pretensioner body resistance is abnormal, replace the left middle row seat belt assembly (the pretensioner is typically non-serviceable, requiring replacement of the entire seat belt assembly). Verify the new part resistance specification matches the original vehicle.
- 7If the wiring harness has an open circuit, repair it by soldering (never simply twist the wires together). Apply dual-wall heat-shrink tubing for waterproof insulation and re-secure the wiring harness to prevent interference with moving parts.
- 8Reconnect all connectors and turn on the power. Use the diagnostic tool to clear the fault code and perform the 'SRS system self-check' or 'component test'. Verify B177A1B does not return.
- 9Perform a road test: move the seat forward and backward, observe if the fault light illuminates intermittently, and confirm the fault is completely resolved.
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