DTC B1622 indicates the Supplemental Restraint System (SRS) control module detects an abnormally low-resistance connection (typically below 1 — Qin Plus
DTC B1622 indicates the Supplemental Restraint System (SRS) control module detects an abnormally low-resistance connection (typically below 1.0Ω) between the driver side airbag inflator circuit and battery positive (B+, 12V).
Normally, the airbag inflator circuit maintains a high-resistance state (open circuit or the 2-3Ω resistance of the inflator itself).
A short to power means the SRS module detects supply voltage instead of the expected high-resistance signal when checking circuit integrity.
This fault poses extreme safety risks.
During a collision, the SRS module may fail to trigger the inflator circuit, preventing airbag deployment.
Additionally, specific operating conditions (such as intermittent wiring contact or voltage fluctuations) can cause unintended airbag deployment, severely threatening driver safety.
- 1Aged and damaged insulation on the internal flat ribbon cable of the clock spring (spiral cable) shorts the airbag ignition wire (usually the yellow harness) to a power wire inside the steering wheel (such as the horn or multifunction button power supply).
- 2Frequent fore-and-aft seat adjustment or friction from door operation wears the insulation on the airbag wiring harness under the driver's seat or inside the A/B-pillar trim, causing it to contact the body power wiring harness.
- 3Backed-out or bent terminals in the airbag connector (usually located under the seat or steering wheel), or water ingress or corrosion inside the connector causing a short circuit between the adjacent power supply terminal and the airbag igniter terminal.
- 4Non-professional vehicle modifications (such as adding seat ventilation/heating, steering wheel heating, or tapping power for a dash cam) pierced or damaged the airbag wiring harness insulation during installation, causing a short circuit to a constant power line.
- 5Internal driver circuit fault in the SRS control module (such as squib driver internal breakdown) causing a false external short to power diagnosis, although this condition is relatively rare.
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the battery negative terminal and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS capacitor. Hang an 'Airbag Under Repair' warning tag to prevent accidental deployment.
- 2Freeze frame analysis: Use the BYD VDS diagnostic tool to read the DTC freeze frame. Record data such as vehicle speed, temperature, and voltage at the time of the fault to determine whether the fault is continuous or intermittent.
- 3Visual and physical inspection: Check the clock spring connector below the steering wheel, the airbag connector under the driver's seat (on some models, the side airbag is inside the seat), and the wiring harness inside the B-pillar trim for damage, water stains, burn marks, or signs of modification.
- 4Isolation diagnosis (clock spring): Disconnect the clock spring to airbag connector. Install a dedicated shorting piece (Dummy Load, 2Ω) in place of the airbag and measure the circuit resistance to the power supply. If the resistance remains low, the short circuit is located before the clock spring (wiring harness or ECU). If the resistance is normal, the clock spring or airbag is faulty.
- 5Harness continuity test: Disconnect the SRS ECU connector. Working from the ECU to the airbag connector, measure the insulation resistance between the ignition wire (usually yellow) and vehicle power (B+) section by section. Resistance must exceed 1 MΩ. Closely inspect harness bends under the seat rail and inside the sill trim.
- 6Component replacement verification: If you suspect a clock spring fault, replace it with a known-good clock spring for testing. If you suspect an SRS ECU fault, carefully check the igniter output waveform using an oscilloscope (perform only in a professional environment).
- 7Repair and verification: Locate and repair the short circuit (re-wrap with insulating tape, or replace the wiring harness or connector). Use a dedicated 2-3Ω resistor to simulate the airbag load, clear the fault code, and perform the SRS system self-check cycle (cycle IGN ON 3 times). Confirm B1622 does not recur and the system has no communication faults.
- 8Final reassembly and testing: Reconnect all connections, reinstall the airbag module, connect the battery, perform a final system self-check, and verify the airbag warning light turns off.
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