DTC B1602 indicates a short to power in the driver frontal airbag (DAB) igniter circuit — Qin Plus
DTC B1602 indicates a short to power in the driver frontal airbag (DAB) igniter circuit.
In the BYD SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) architecture, the Airbag Control Unit (ACU) continuously monitors the circuit resistance of each airbag igniter (normally about 2-3 Ω) and its insulation status.
When the ACU detects abnormal continuity between the driver airbag igniter wiring and the vehicle power supply (12V+) (resistance below the threshold, typically <10 kΩ for a short to power), it triggers this fault.
This fault means the airbag may deploy unexpectedly while driving (a serious safety risk) or fail to deploy properly in a collision because the power supply clamps the circuit.
The fault may originate in the clock spring (spiral cable), airbag wiring harness, connector, or the ACU internal driver circuit.
- 1Clock spring internal damage: Frequent steering wheel rotation wears and breaks the internal ribbon cable, shorting the wire to the power supply line. Common in high-mileage BYD Tang and Song series vehicles.
- 2Airbag wiring harness insulation damaged: The wiring harness below the steering wheel rubs inside the steering column, sharp edges cut the harness, or improper securing after accident repairs causes the harness to contact a 12V power wire (such as the horn circuit or multifunction switch power supply).
- 3Water ingress or liquid corrosion: A/C condensate leakage or poor front windshield sealing causes water to flow under the steering wheel, corroding the airbag connector terminals (usually the yellow plug) and causing a short circuit between terminals or a short to power.
- 4Non-OEM modifications: Improper handling when installing steering wheel buttons, modifying the push-to-start system, or wrapping the steering wheel in leather damages the airbag wiring harness or introduces external power supply interference.
- 5Airbag Control Unit (ACU) internal fault: ACU internal ignition driver chip breakdown (MOSFET short circuit) causes the output terminal to continuously supply voltage. Replace the ACU assembly and reconfigure the coding.
- 1Safety preparation: Set the vehicle to OFF, disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds (to fully discharge the SRS capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment). Wear an anti-static wrist strap. Do not use non-explosion-proof testing equipment near the airbag.
- 2Visual inspection: Check the yellow airbag connector below the steering wheel (usually on the left side of the steering column) for oxidation or signs of water ingress; check the clock spring connector for looseness and bent pins; check the steering wheel for signs of modification.
- 3Circuit measurement: Set the multimeter to the resistance setting (verify the multimeter has no voltage output). Disconnect the body-to-airbag connector. Measure the resistance from each airbag-side harness terminal to the body power supply (>1MΩ). Measure the ACU-side harness for a short to power.
- 4Component isolation test: Remove the driver airbag (disconnect the upper end of the clock spring) and measure the airbag unit resistance (normal: 2.0–3.0 Ω). Connect an airbag simulator to the ACU side in place of the actual airbag. If the fault code clears, the clock spring or wiring harness is faulty. If the fault code remains, the fault is in the ACU or chassis wiring harness.
- 5Clock spring inspection: Remove the clock spring and visually inspect the internal ribbon cable for breaks or burn marks. Measure the continuity and insulation of each clock spring circuit. Replace the clock spring if testing reveals an open or short circuit. (Note: Some BYD models require matching the clock spring to the steering angle sensor. Calibrate after replacement.)
- 6Wiring harness repair: If the wiring harness is damaged, wrap it with high-temperature insulating tape (Tesa 51036 or equivalent) and adjust the harness routing to avoid contact with metal edges. If water has entered the connector, clean it with electronic contact cleaner, blow dry, and apply conductive paste.
- 7System reset: After repair, reconnect all components and the battery. Use the VDS or Launch X-431 diagnostic tool to enter the SRS system and perform 'Clear DTCs' and 'System Self-test'. Confirm B1602 becomes a history code or clears. Verify the SRS warning light turns off after the self-test.
- 8Function verification: Perform an ignition cycle test (ON-OFF three times) and verify the fault code does not recur; perform an airbag system communication test and verify normal communication between the ACU and all sensors.
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