DTC B161B1A indicates the airbag control module (SRS ECU) detects the Passenger Front Airbag ignition circuit resistance is below the calibrated threshold (typically below 1 — Qin Plus
DTC B161B1A indicates the airbag control module (SRS ECU) detects the Passenger Front Airbag ignition circuit resistance is below the calibrated threshold (typically below 1.0-1.5Ω; normal range is generally 2.0-5.0Ω).
Low resistance typically indicates a parallel short circuit path in the airbag circuit.
Potential causes include a wiring harness short to ground, bridged connector pins, or an internal short circuit in the airbag inflator.
The ECU classifies this as a "Low Resistance" fault.
This condition can prevent proper airbag deployment during a collision because the short circuit diverts the current.
In extreme cases, static electricity or electromagnetic interference can cause unintended deployment.
Consequently, the SRS system enters fail-safe mode, illuminates the airbag warning light, and disables the passenger front airbag.
- 1Front passenger airbag wiring harness wear causing a short to ground: Vibration chafes the harness insulation against the instrument panel frame or A/C duct edge, allowing the copper core to contact the vehicle body metal and form a parallel resistance.
- 2Bent airbag connector pins or water ingress: Improper removal or installation causes the pins of the airbag connector (usually yellow, located inside the center console or behind the glovebox) to contact the housing, or poor sealing allows electrolyte corrosion to form a low-resistance path.
- 3Internal short circuit in the clock spring: If the front passenger airbag features a steering wheel-mounted trigger mechanism (some models), a short circuit between the flat ribbon cable layers inside the clock spring reduces circuit resistance.
- 4SRS control module internal sampling circuit fault: A damaged shunt resistor or A/D converter inside the ECU triggers a false low-resistance fault while the actual airbag circuit is normal.
- 5Internal short circuit in the airbag inflator: insulation failure between the igniter bridge wire and housing (manufacturing defect or moisture ingress) causing abnormally low resistance.
- 1Safety preparation: Switch off the ignition, disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Fault confirmation: Connect the VDS diagnostic tool, read the freeze frame data (Fault Frame), record the vehicle status when the fault occurred, and confirm B161B1A is a current fault (Present), not a history fault.
- 3Visual inspection: Remove the glove box or passenger-side lower instrument panel trim. Inspect the yellow airbag wiring harness for wear or crush marks. Verify the connector is fully locked and check for water ingress or terminal oxidation.
- 4Isolate the circuit: Disconnect the front passenger airbag connector (usually located in the middle of the center console or behind the airbag). Use a multimeter to measure resistance on the wiring harness side (ECU side). A normal reading shows infinite or very high resistance (>10kΩ). A low resistance value indicates a wiring harness short to ground.
- 5Component test: If the wiring harness side is normal, connect a dedicated airbag load simulator (2.7Ω dummy resistor) to the ECU side. Clear the fault code. If the fault disappears, the SRS ECU is normal. Next, measure the airbag unit resistance. It must be between 2.0-5.0Ω. If the resistance is below 1.5Ω, replace the airbag assembly.
- 6Clock spring inspection: If equipped with a passenger-side clock spring, measure the internal slip ring resistance. Resistance must remain stable while turning the steering wheel. Replace the clock spring if intermittent low resistance occurs.
- 7ECU Verification: If the wiring harness, airbag, and clock spring are normal but the fault code persists, check the SRS ECU connector for backed-out pins. Replace the SRS control module if necessary.
- 8Repair verification: After repairing the short circuit or replacing the faulty component, reconnect all connectors and the battery negative terminal. Use VDS to perform 'Airbag System Configuration Check' and 'Sensor Calibration', clear the fault codes, and perform a collision simulation test (activate test mode using the diagnostic tool; do not strike the vehicle directly). Confirm DTC B161B1A does not return and the warning lamp is off.
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