In the BYD SRS system, DTC B17A300 carries two technical indications: 1) The surface description, "seat belt pretensioner collision", indicates the system detects a trigger signal or ignition circuit fault in the driver or passenger seat belt pretensioner (Pyrotechnic Pretensioner); 2) The underlying technical definition, "SRS CAN Signal Abnormal", means the airbag control unit (ACU) loses communication with the vehicle CAN network (typically the powertrain or comfort network) or detects a data checksum error — Atto 8
In the BYD SRS system, DTC B17A300 carries two technical indications: 1) The surface description, "seat belt pretensioner collision", indicates the system detects a trigger signal or ignition circuit fault in the driver or passenger seat belt pretensioner (Pyrotechnic Pretensioner); 2) The underlying technical definition, "SRS CAN Signal Abnormal", means the airbag control unit (ACU) loses communication with the vehicle CAN network (typically the powertrain or comfort network) or detects a data checksum error.
This fault forces the airbag system into a degraded mode, potentially preventing airbag and pretensioner deployment during a collision.
It also triggers a continuous airbag warning light on the instrument cluster.
In models such as the Qin PRO, this fault frequently accompanies B17A200 (collision record locked) or B17A400 (hardwired signal abnormal), indicating the vehicle experienced a collision or the CAN bus physical layer has an intermittent fault.
- 1CAN bus physical layer fault: Short circuit between CAN-H and CAN-L, short to power or ground, or terminal resistor (120Ω±2%) drift causing signal reflection. Typically occurs at dashboard wiring harness junctions or results from floor wiring harness oxidation after water ingress.
- 2Airbag Control Unit (SRS ECU) power supply fault: blown constant power (B+) circuit fuse, missing ignition switch signal (IGN), or loose ground points G301/G302, causing the ACU to lose power during the communication cycle.
- 3Seat belt pretensioner ignition circuit fault: Water ingress and oxidation at the pretensioner connector (usually below the B-pillar) causes abnormal resistance (normal: 2.0-2.4Ω), or a deployed but unreplaced pretensioner after a collision creates an open circuit (>10Ω).
- 4Internal control unit fault: Damaged ACU internal CAN transceiver chip (such as NXP TJA1042) or MCU clock crystal drift causing communication timing errors. Often results from voltage surges following battery depletion during extended vehicle parking.
- 5Software/configuration fault: The ACU software version does not match the vehicle network configuration table (DID Config), or failure to clear crash data via the 'Clear Crash Record' procedure on the dedicated diagnostic tool locks the system in a fault state.
- 1Safety Preparation and Initial Inspection: Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal and wait 3 minutes for the SRS capacitor to discharge. Use VDS or Launch X431 to read the complete DTC snapshot and check for accompanying codes B17A200 (crash lock) or B17A400 (hardwire fault). Check the vehicle for collision repair history. Visually inspect the airbag module and pretensioner connectors for signs of deployment.
- 2Power supply and ground check: Reconnect the battery and turn the ignition ON. Measure the voltage at ACU connector pin 1 (constant B+) and pin 9 (IGN); the voltage should be 11-14V. Measure the resistance between the ground pin (usually pin 10/11) and the vehicle body; the resistance should be <1Ω. If the voltage is abnormal, check instrument panel power distribution box fuses F1/9 and F2/3, and ground point G301.
- 3CAN bus physical layer inspection: Use an oscilloscope to measure the ACU CAN-H (pin 6) and CAN-L (pin 14) waveforms. Dominant levels should be 3.5V (CAN-H) and 1.5V (CAN-L). The recessive level should be 2.5V. Disconnect power and measure the termination resistance. Total vehicle resistance should be approximately 60Ω (two 120Ω resistors in parallel). If resistance is abnormal, inspect the wiring harness section by section for short or open circuits.
- 4Pretensioner circuit check: Disconnect the pretensioner connector (driver side usually located below the B-pillar; passenger side behind the glovebox). Measure the pretensioner resistance. The resistance must be 2.0-2.4Ω. If open or shorted, replace the pretensioner assembly. Inspect the connector pins for oxidation (typically green copper corrosion). Treat with electrical contact cleaner if necessary.
- 5Module replacement and calibration: If the wiring harness and pretensioner are normal, replace the ACU control unit (some models require VIN matching). After installing the new module, perform 'SRS system initialization' and 'crash sensor calibration'. Use the diagnostic tool to clear the DTC and perform a simulated crash test (use a dedicated resistor load instead of the airbag; never measure the airbag connector directly). Confirm B17A300 does not return and the instrument warning light turns off.
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