B16201B

B16201B is a BYD SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) diagnostic code indicating a communication interruption or open electrical connection between the driver's seat side airbag and the SRS control unit — Qin Plus

Safety System

B16201B is a BYD SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) diagnostic code indicating a communication interruption or open electrical connection between the driver's seat side airbag and the SRS control unit.

This DTC sets when the SRS ECU detects the driver's side airbag circuit resistance exceeds the standard range (typically 2.0-3.0Ω ±0.5Ω), indicating an open circuit or high resistance.

This incomplete airbag deployment circuit prevents the system from igniting the gas generator during a side impact.

This fault forces the SRS into a degraded mode.

The driver's seat side airbag becomes inoperative, but other airbags (front, curtain) typically remain functional.

Despite involving the high-voltage interlock and safety systems, the vehicle remains drivable with reduced occupant protection.

This fault continuously illuminates the instrument cluster airbag warning light on some models.

5
Cases Logged
5
Causes
  • 1Loose yellow SRS connector under the seat or backed-out terminals: Frequent forward and backward driver seat adjustment pulls the wiring harness, loosening the connector latch or causing poor terminal contact.
  • 2Clock spring internal open circuit: A broken flat ribbon cable inside the rotary connector beneath the steering wheel disrupts side airbag signal transmission (for side airbag wiring harness connections integrated into the seat backrest).
  • 3Airbag module internal open circuit: Broken inflator bridge wire or corroded connector causes infinite circuit resistance.
  • 4Physical damage to the wiring harness: Worn harness sheath near the seat rail, or broken or crushed metal conductors. Commonly occurs after seat modifications or corrosion from water ingress.
  • 5SRS control unit software false reporting: Early-batch ECU software is overly sensitive to resistance values, falsely reporting an open circuit fault in low-temperature conditions.
  • 1
    Safety Preparation: Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal, wait at least 3 minutes for the SRS capacitor to discharge, wear an anti-static wrist strap, and disable the high-voltage system (for electric vehicles, disconnect the maintenance switch).
  • 2
    Initial diagnosis: Use the BYD VDS or X-431 diagnostic tool to read all DTCs. Verify B16201B is a current fault, not a history fault. Record freeze frame data (seat position, vehicle speed, etc.).
  • 3
    Visual inspection: Check the yellow SRS connector under the driver's seat (usually located on the inner side of the seat rail). Confirm the connector is fully seated and the locking tab is in place. Inspect the terminals for oxidation, burn marks, or backed-out pins.
  • 4
    Circuit measurement: Disconnect the airbag connector. Use a dedicated probe (do not directly pierce the wiring harness) to measure the resistance on the harness side; the normal value is 2-3Ω. Measure the insulation resistance to ground; it must be greater than 10MΩ. Check wiring harness continuity while moving the seat through its full travel range.
  • 5
    Component replacement test: Replace the original airbag module with a known-good airbag simulator (2.7Ω resistor). If the fault code clears, the airbag module is faulty. If the code remains, check wiring harness continuity between the SRS ECU and the seat.
  • 6
    Clock spring inspection (if applicable): For models with the wiring harness routed under the steering wheel, check the continuity of each clock spring circuit. Measure resistance while turning the steering wheel to verify it remains stable.
  • 7
    Repair verification: After repairing or replacing the faulty component, reconnect the battery, clear the fault code, perform an SRS system self-check (turn the ignition switch to ON and verify the airbag warning light turns off after 6 seconds), and perform a road test to verify the repair.
  • 8
    System calibration: On some models, perform 'Seat Position Sensor Calibration' and 'Airbag System Configuration Check' in VDS to write the parameters of the newly replaced airbag to the ECU.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Loose connector under E2 seat triggered intermittent warning

Vehicle: 2019 BYD E2, 32,000 km. Symptoms: The airbag warning light on the instrument panel illuminates intermittently, especially on rough roads. DTC B16201B appears sporadically. Diagnosis: The yellow 2-pin connector under the driver's seat was not fully locked; the retaining clip showed wear. Cause: Frequent seat adjustment pulled the wiring harness during seat movement, loosening the connector. Fix: Re-seated and locked the connector, secured the harness routing with cable ties to avoid interference with the seat rails, cleared the fault code, and monitored for one week. No recurrence.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Internal open circuit in Qin EV seat airbag module

Vehicle: 2019 Qin EV, post-accident repair. Symptoms: Airbag warning light stays on after repairs. VDS shows current fault code B16201B. Diagnosis: Harness side resistance normal at 2.4 Ω; airbag module side resistance infinite. Disassembled seat and found corroded internal pins on side airbag gas generator connector (water entered during accident, not fully dried). Solution: Replaced driver side airbag module (part no. EPB-5820100), coded and matched new module, cleared fault codes after bus communication test passed.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

E3 seat rail wiring harness worn through, open circuit

Vehicle: 2020 BYD E3, ride-share, 85,000 km. Symptoms: Airbag light always on, DTC B16201B. Fault code status changes when adjusting the seat. Diagnosis: Peeled back the harness protective sleeve under the seat. Found two wires nearly worn through at the seat rail corner, held by only a few copper strands. Cause: Long-term frequent seat adjustment caused the harness retaining clip to detach, letting the harness rub against the metal rail. Solution: Soldered and heat-shrink repaired the wires, rerouted the harness path, added anti-chafe sleeving, and adjusted harness length slack.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

SRS ECU software false alarm upgrade case

Vehicle: 2019 Qin EV, driven in cold climates. Symptoms: DTC B16201B appeared intermittently during cold morning starts, self-cleared as temperature rose; wiring harness readings normal. Diagnosis: Comparison with same-period models confirmed early ECU software (V1.2) set resistance detection thresholds too strict for low temperatures. Resolution: Upgraded SRS control unit software online to V1.5 via VDS. The new software optimizes the resistance compensation algorithm for low-temperature conditions. DTC has not returned since the upgrade.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Seat modification damaged the wiring harness connector.

Vehicle: 2020 E3, after installing sport seats. Symptoms: Airbag light came on immediately after the modification, setting DTC B16201B. Diagnosis: Inspection found the shop cut the original harness to connect the new seats directly instead of using the OEM SRS adapter. This caused poor terminal contact and reverse polarity risk. Solution: Restored the original vehicle harness (ordered a new harness assembly), used the OEM-specified seat adapter harness, and matched airbag circuit impedance. Cleared fault codes and the system returned to normal.
Data confidence: Official This information is for reference only. Always consult a qualified technician for diagnosis and repair. Do not attempt high-voltage system repairs yourself. Sources: [1]