DTC B160A1A indicates abnormally high resistance (open circuit or high-resistance condition) in the driver-side front airbag (stage 1) ignition circuit — Qin Plus
DTC B160A1A indicates abnormally high resistance (open circuit or high-resistance condition) in the driver-side front airbag (stage 1) ignition circuit.
This is a critical Supplemental Restraint System (SRS) safety fault.
Normal airbag igniter resistance is 1.5-3.5Ω.
If the system detects resistance continuously exceeding the threshold (typically >5Ω or open circuit), it identifies an ignition circuit integrity fault.
The SRS control unit then illuminates the instrument cluster airbag warning light and enters fail-safe mode.
This condition may prevent the driver-side airbag from deploying during a collision.
The fault indicates an electrical connection issue in the circuit, not an explosion risk from the airbag itself.
- 1The flat cable inside the clock spring is broken, fatigued, or has poor contact. Frequent full-lock steering or prolonged left-and-right rotation easily causes internal open circuits.
- 2Yellow airbag wiring harness connector under the steering wheel (usually with a double-locking mechanism) not fully seated, or has backed-out pins, oxidation, corrosion, or excessive contact resistance.
- 3Abnormally high resistance or open circuit in the driver airbag module internal igniter, or damaged module (rare but possible)
- 4Airbag wiring harness cut, damaged, loosely connected, insulation damaged, or waterproof seal compromised during accident repair or steering wheel modification.
- 5In very rare cases, the cause is an internal sampling circuit fault in the SRS control unit, a software version defect, or a poor ground.
- 1Safety Preparation: Disconnect the negative battery cable and wait at least 3 minutes to discharge residual capacitor charge to prevent accidental airbag deployment during repair.
- 2Fault Confirmation: Use the BYD dedicated diagnostic tool to read SRS system fault codes. Confirm B160A1A is a current fault (Active) and does not clear. Record freeze frame data.
- 3Initial inspection: Verify the yellow airbag connector below the steering wheel (connection between the spiral cable and body wiring harness) is fully seated. Inspect the locking tab for breakage and the wiring harness for obvious damage or crush marks.
- 4Clock spring inspection: Remove the steering wheel and disconnect the airbag module connector. Use a multimeter to measure the resistance between the terminals on both sides of the clock spring. The resistance should be <1Ω. Slowly turn the steering wheel through its full range and verify the resistance remains stable without fluctuation.
- 5Circuit continuity check: If the clock spring is normal, measure the continuity and insulation of the wiring harness from the clock spring to the SRS control unit. Specifically check for wear on the harness passing through the steering column area.
- 6Airbag module inspection: If the wiring is normal, use a dedicated shorting lead or a multimeter to directly measure the resistance between the two terminals of the airbag module igniter. Normal range: 1.5-3.5 Ω. If the resistance is too high, replace the module.
- 7Repair/Replacement: Based on measurement results, replace the clock spring with an OEM part (70% probability), repair poor wiring harness contact (20% probability), or replace the airbag module (10% probability). Never use aftermarket resistor bypass modules.
- 8System reset verification: Reconnect all connectors and the battery, clear the fault code, and perform the SRS system self-check cycle (cycle the ignition ON-OFF three times or perform a drive cycle self-check). Verify the warning light turns off and the fault code does not return.
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