This DTC indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control unit (ACU) detects an open circuit or high resistance in the driver front airbag ignition circuit — Qin Plus
This DTC indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control unit (ACU) detects an open circuit or high resistance in the driver front airbag ignition circuit.
The ACU continuously monitors the airbag module circuit resistance through its internal diagnostic circuit.
Normal resistance is 2.0-2.4 Ω.
Resistance exceeding the threshold (usually >6 Ω) or a completely open circuit triggers DTC B1600-00.
The system then enters fail-safe mode and disables the driver-side airbag, preventing deployment during a collision.
The instrument panel airbag warning lamp remains illuminated to alert the driver.
Possible causes include the airbag module, clock spring (spiral cable), wiring harness connectors, or the ACU internal sampling circuit.
- 1Fatigue fracture or poor contact of the internal flat cable in the clock spring (airbag spiral cable). Frequent steering wheel rotation often breaks the internal conductive coil, causing an intermittent or permanent open circuit.
- 2Driver airbag module connector (yellow plug) is loose, oxidized, has backed-out pins, or the locking mechanism has failed, causing excessive contact resistance or a complete open circuit.
- 3Open circuit or abnormal resistance in the airbag module inflator igniter, typically resulting from internal defects or prolonged inactivity.
- 4Damaged steering column wiring harness sleeve below the steering wheel causes internal wires to bend repeatedly during steering wheel rotation, resulting in broken copper strands or short circuits from worn insulation.
- 5SRS control unit (ACU) internal sampling circuit fault, software false report, or unstable 12V power supply/ground causing false open-circuit detection
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS backup power supply. Wear an anti-static wrist strap to prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Visual inspection: Verify the yellow SRS-specific connectors under the steering wheel and instrument panel seat fully and the locking tabs engage. Inspect the terminals for oxidation, corrosion, or deformation.
- 3Simulation test: Remove the driver-side airbag module. Connect a 2.2Ω/0.5W standard resistor in parallel at the wiring harness connector to simulate a normal airbag load. Reconnect the battery and turn the ignition on. If the fault code changes to a history code or disappears, the airbag module itself is faulty.
- 4Clock spring inspection: Disconnect the connectors at both ends of the clock spring. Use a multimeter to measure the resistance between the terminals. Normal resistance is <1Ω. Slowly turn the steering wheel while checking for an intermittent open circuit (resistance spikes to infinity).
- 5Harness continuity test: Measure wiring harness continuity from the ACU connector to the airbag connector. Focus on verifying the continuity and insulation of the wiring harness near the steering column. Inspect body ground points G101 and G102 for looseness.
- 6Component replacement: Based on test results, replace the clock spring (center during installation), repair the wiring harness, or replace the airbag module (record the new module's resistance value and verify it is within tolerance).
- 7System configuration: Use BYD dedicated diagnostic tool VDS or ED400 to execute the 'SRS System Configuration' or 'Coding' function (if replacing a module), clear fault codes, and perform a 'System Self-check'.
- 8Function check: Reinstall all components and reconnect the battery. Turn the ignition switch to the ON position and verify the airbag warning light turns off after the 6-second self-check. Perform a left and right full-lock steering test to confirm the intermittent fault does not recur.
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