DTC B178A1A indicates the SRS control module detects the Passenger Second Stage Front Airbag igniter circuit resistance at or near 0 ohms — Atto 8
DTC B178A1A indicates the SRS control module detects the Passenger Second Stage Front Airbag igniter circuit resistance at or near 0 ohms.
The second-stage airbag uses dual-stage ignition technology to control the deployment time interval based on collision severity.
A resistance of 0 ohms indicates a short circuit fault in the airbag igniter circuit (short between wires or short to ground), not an open circuit.
This fault causes the SRS system to enter degraded mode: the system disables this specific airbag circuit to prevent accidental deployment and illuminates the airbag warning light.
In a frontal collision, the passenger side may lose second-stage cushioning protection, deploying only the first-stage airbag or failing to deploy entirely, which significantly reduces occupant protection.
- 1Front passenger-side airbag module internal igniter short circuit: A fused internal igniter bridge wire or moisture in the pyrotechnic charge causes a sudden drop in resistance.
- 2Internal dashboard wiring harness chafed and shorted: Vibration and friction damage the Stage 2 airbag wiring harness insulation (usually located on the dashboard crossmember or behind the glove box), shorting it to body metal.
- 3Connector water ingress and corrosion: A/C condensate leakage or vehicle wading causes a short circuit between pins on the front passenger-side floor wiring harness connector (such as CJ103 or near ground point G301).
- 4SRS control module internal detection circuit fault: Damage to the ECU internal sampling resistor or A/D conversion circuit causes a false short circuit fault.
- 5Modification or repair damage: When installing a dashcam or audio system on the front passenger side, or during accident repairs, screws crush, drill bits pierce, or retaining clips pinch the wiring harness.
- 1Safety preparation: Switch the vehicle OFF, disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS backup power supply.
- 2Fault confirmation: Use VDS or a Launch diagnostic tool to read all DTCs. Verify B178A1A is an active fault rather than a history fault. Check for accompanying fault codes (e.g., B178B - front passenger second-stage resistance too low).
- 3Physical inspection: Remove the passenger-side lower dashboard trim panel. Visually inspect the yellow SRS wiring harness corrugated conduit for damage or burn marks. Check the airbag connector (usually located behind the glove box or on the dashboard crossmember) for looseness or water ingress.
- 4Airbag module inspection: Disconnect the front passenger second-stage airbag connector (use a shorting bar or anti-static measures). Use a digital multimeter to measure the resistance between the airbag-side terminals. The normal value is 2.0-5.0 Ω. If the reading is 0-1 Ω, replace the front passenger airbag module assembly.
- 5Harness continuity check: Measure the resistance to ground of the circuit between the SRS ECU-side harness connector (ECU disconnected) and the airbag connector. Standard value: Infinite. If the reading is 0 Ω or a low resistance, locate the short circuit in the harness. Focus on the dashboard bracket pass-through hole and areas where the floor harness contacts the body.
- 6ECU verification: If the wiring harness and airbag are normal, measure the resistance between the corresponding pins of the SRS ECU connector. If the resistance remains 0 Ω, this indicates an internal ECU fault. Replace the airbag control module.
- 7Repair and verification: After repairing or replacing the faulty component, reconnect all connectors and the battery. Use the diagnostic tool to clear the fault code. Perform the 'SRS system self-check' and 'configuration write' (if replacing the ECU). Verify the fault code does not return and the airbag warning light turns off.
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