DTC B1621 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) electronic control unit detects an abnormally low-resistance path (typically <0 — Qin Plus
DTC B1621 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) electronic control unit detects an abnormally low-resistance path (typically <0.5Ω) between the driver side airbag squib circuit and body ground (GND).
Under normal conditions, airbag squib resistance must measure 2.0-3.0Ω, and insulation resistance to ground must exceed 1MΩ.
A short to ground indicates an unintended ground connection in the squib circuit.
This causes: 1) During a collision, the ground connection bypasses current, preventing proper airbag deployment and resulting in a loss of side-impact protection; 2) In extreme cases, wiring vibration may cause the ECU to misinterpret the short as a valid deployment signal, creating a risk of unintended airbag deployment; 3) The SRS system enters fail-safe mode, illuminates the instrument cluster airbag warning light, and disables the associated airbag function.
This fault affects a core active safety system component and requires immediate repair.
- 1Driver's seat side airbag wiring harness wear: Since the side airbag typically mounts inside the seat backrest, the wiring harness routes near the seat slide rail to connect to the body harness. Repeated forward and backward seat adjustment causes the wiring harness to rub against the metal slide rail. Worn insulation allows the copper core to short to body ground.
- 2Internal terminal displacement, corrosion, or water ingress in the yellow airbag connector under the seat (Clock Spring or Seat Connector) causes a short circuit between the terminal and the connector housing (ground). This commonly occurs after vehicle wading or deep interior cleaning.
- 3Side airbag module internal squib short circuit: Moisture in the airbag ignition charge or a manufacturing defect causes the ignition wire to short to the metal housing.
- 4SRS ECU internal detection circuit fault: A damaged internal A/D converter or monitoring chip in the control unit causes a false short-to-ground fault.
- 5Improper modification or repair: Retaining screws pierce the airbag wiring harness when installing seat ventilation/heating or aftermarket seat covers, or the seat slide rail crushes the wiring harness if not secured to standard after accident repairs.
- 1Safety preparation: Shift the vehicle into P, apply the parking brake, turn off the ignition, and disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal. Wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS backup power supply and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Fault Confirmation: Reconnect the battery. Use a BYD dedicated diagnostic tool (such as ED400 or VDS) to read the DTC. Confirm B1621 is a current code, not a history code. Record the freeze frame data to check the vehicle speed and ambient temperature at the time of the fault.
- 3Visual inspection: Remove the driver's seat (leave the wiring harness connected). Inspect the yellow airbag wiring harness under the seat (usually identified by yellow corrugated tubing or tape) for wear, damaged insulation, or crush marks. Focus on areas where the harness contacts the seat slide rails and base frame.
- 4Circuit isolation test: Turn off the ignition, disconnect the battery, and unplug the airbag connector under the seat (usually a yellow 2-pin connector). Use a multimeter set to resistance to measure the resistance between each of the two pins on the harness side (body-to-ECU direction) and body ground. Normal resistance is infinite (OL). A resistance <1Ω confirms a short to ground.
- 5Step-by-step diagnosis: If the wiring harness side tests normal, measure the resistance between the two pins on the airbag module side (seat side). Normal resistance is 2.0-3.0 Ω. A reading near 0 Ω indicates an internal short circuit in the airbag module. If the wiring harness side has a short circuit, inspect the wiring harness channel below the B-pillar along the wire routing and check for water stains, corrosion, or mechanical damage.
- 6Connector inspection: Inspect the airbag connector pins for deformation, backing out, or corrosion. Measure continuity between the pins and the connector housing to verify no short to ground. Inspect the SRS ECU connector (usually located under the center console or center tunnel) for water ingress or oxidation.
- 7Repair verification: Repair the damaged wiring harness (solder and insulate with double-layer heat-shrink tubing) or replace the faulty airbag module/connector. Restore all connections and clear the fault codes. Perform a functional test using a dedicated airbag simulator resistor (2.0Ω) in place of the actual airbag. Confirm the system passes the self-check and no fault codes return.
- 8Final confirmation: Remove the simulator resistor, connect the actual airbag, perform a system self-check, and conduct a road test to verify the fault does not recur when adjusting the seat to its limit positions.
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