DTC B178F11 indicates a short to body ground in the front passenger dual-stage airbag (Stage 2) ignition circuit — Atto 8
DTC B178F11 indicates a short to body ground in the front passenger dual-stage airbag (Stage 2) ignition circuit.
In the BYD SRS system, the airbag utilizes a dual-stage ignition design: low speeds trigger the first stage, and high speeds trigger the second stage.
The '11' suffix indicates the control unit detects circuit resistance below the threshold (typically <0.8Ω), determining a short to ground.
This safety-critical fault prevents the SRS system from deploying the second-stage airbag during a collision or creates a risk of unintended deployment.
The fault can originate in the clock spring, instrument panel harness, floor harness, or inside the airbag module.
- 1Worn front passenger airbag wiring harness insulation contacting body metal, commonly due to improper harness securing after instrument panel removal and installation.
- 2Internal short circuit in the airbag clock spring (spiral cable). Long-term steering wheel rotation breaks the internal wiring, causing a short to ground.
- 3Water ingress and oxidation at the SRS system connector. Poor sealing, especially below the A-pillar or at the floor wiring harness firewall pass-through, causes corrosion and short circuits.
- 4Front passenger airbag module internal igniter short to housing. Typical causes include moisture ingress into the airbag module or a manufacturing defect.
- 5SRS control unit internal driver circuit fault causing a false short-to-ground indication (confirm after ruling out external wiring).
- 1Perform high-voltage system power-down: disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal, wait at least 3 minutes to ensure the SRS capacitor fully discharges, and press the horn button during this time to release residual charge.
- 2Read freeze frame data: Use the VDS2000/Launch X431 diagnostic tool to record the ambient temperature, vehicle speed, and crash sensor status when the fault occurred to confirm if the fault is intermittent.
- 3Visual inspection: Remove the front passenger glove box. Inspect the SRS wiring harness for obvious damage or crushing. Specifically check the pins on the yellow dedicated connector (usually marked F201) for bending or water ingress.
- 4Resistance measurement: Disconnect the airbag module connector. Use a digital multimeter to measure the resistance to ground on the wiring harness side. Normal value is infinite. If resistance is <1Ω, inspect the wiring harness section by section, focusing on the clock spring (if applicable) and the instrument panel wiring harness.
- 5Airbag module inspection: Connect the dedicated load tool in place of the airbag. If the fault code changes to open circuit (Open), replace the front passenger airbag module. If it remains a short circuit, continue troubleshooting the wiring harness.
- 6Wiring harness repair: After locating the short circuit, repair the harness using high-temperature tape (Tesa 51036 or equivalent). Maintain a >20mm clearance between the wiring harness and the metal frame. Install corrugated conduit for protection if necessary.
- 7System verification: Reconnect all connectors, restore power, and use the diagnostic tool to perform the 'SRS system self-test' and 'collision simulation test' (without deployment). Confirm B178F11 changes to a history fault, then clear the code.
- 8Road test verification: Perform a road test of more than 5 km, including bumpy road sections, to confirm the fault does not recur. Verify the SRS warning light turns off normally after the self-check.
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