DTC B162212 indicates abnormal continuity between the squib circuit of the driver side airbag (usually the seat-mounted side airbag) and the vehicle positive power supply (B+, battery voltage) — Qin Plus
DTC B162212 indicates abnormal continuity between the squib circuit of the driver side airbag (usually the seat-mounted side airbag) and the vehicle positive power supply (B+, battery voltage).
In the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control logic, the airbag squib circuit must maintain a high-impedance open state at rest.
The control unit determines circuit integrity by monitoring circuit voltage.
Detecting a short to power in this circuit indicates damaged wiring insulation contacting a constant power wire, or an insulation failure of the igniter coil inside the airbag module.
This fault immediately forces the SRS into fail-safe mode, which: 1) Disables the driver side airbag, preventing deployment during a side impact; 2) Illuminates the airbag warning lamp; 3) Creates a risk of unintended airbag deployment in extreme cases (despite multiple protections in modern systems).
Because it involves a core component of the passive safety system, this fault classifies as severe and requires immediate repair.
- 1Mechanical damage to the wiring harness under the seat: The driver's side airbag wiring harness moves back and forth with the seat. Long-term bending or crushing by foreign objects (e.g., coins, toys) wears through the insulation, causing a short circuit to the seat heater wire or constant power wire.
- 2SRS connector water ingress and corrosion: Driving through water or cleaning the interior allows liquid to enter the dedicated yellow SRS connector under the seat. This causes an electrolytic short circuit between terminals, or verdigris creates continuity between the power supply terminal and the airbag circuit terminal.
- 3Airbag module internal short circuit: Aging, static electricity, or manufacturing defects damage the igniter (Squib) internal coil insulation, causing the primary coil to contact the secondary coil or housing and create a short to power.
- 4Improper post-accident repair: Failure to replace the damaged wiring harness according to specifications after a collision, or using non-genuine parts, causes incorrect wiring routing, leaving the airbag circuit parallel to the power circuit with insufficient insulation.
- 5SRS control unit internal fault: A damaged MOSFET or sampling resistor in the internal monitoring circuit falsely reports a short to power, or an internal driver circuit fault actually shorts the circuit to power.
- 1Safe power-down: Turn off the ignition switch, disconnect the negative battery cable, and wait at least 3 minutes (some models require 90 seconds, but BYD SRS capacitor discharge usually takes 3 minutes) to fully discharge the system.
- 2Fault Status Confirmation: Connect the BYD dedicated diagnostic tool (VDS2000 or EDT), enter the SRS system, read the fault codes, confirm B162212 is a current fault (Current DTC), and check the voltage value in the freeze frame data (usually displayed as 12V or battery voltage).
- 3Visual and physical inspection: Check the yellow SRS connector under the driver's seat (usually located on the outer side of the seat slide rail or at the seat base) for water ingress, terminal corrosion, and bent pins. Inspect the wiring harness for wear or damaged insulation within the seat travel range.
- 4Circuit isolation test: Disconnect the driver side airbag module connector (remove the seat side trim panel or backrest cover). Use the special shorting bar to short the harness-side connector and measure the harness-side voltage. If battery voltage remains, the fault is in the wiring harness. If 0V, the fault is in the airbag module.
- 5Harness continuity check: Disconnect the SRS control unit connector (usually located in the center tunnel or under the dashboard). Use a multimeter to measure continuity between the driver side airbag ignition wire (usually a yellow harness; consult the wiring diagram for model-specific pin assignments) and power (B+) and ground to check for short circuits.
- 6Insulation resistance measurement: Use a megohmmeter (500V range) to measure the insulation resistance between the airbag ignition circuit and other power circuits. Normal resistance exceeds 10MΩ. A reading below 1MΩ confirms insulation damage.
- 7Component replacement verification: If testing confirms an internal short circuit in the airbag module, replace the driver side airbag module (Note: Replace with a certified part of the same model and batch). If testing confirms a wiring harness fault, repair the damaged section and reinforce protection using corrugated conduit and fabric tape. Leave sufficient harness length, especially at seat movement areas.
- 8System reset and matching: Reconnect all connectors, connect the battery, and turn the ignition switch to the ON position (do not start). Use the diagnostic tool to clear the fault codes and perform an SRS system self-diagnosis. Some models require a "Configuration and Settings" or "Coding" procedure to write the new airbag module parameters.
- 9Function verification: Confirm the airbag warning light turns off after the 6-second self-check. Read the data stream: the 'driver side airbag resistance value' must be between 2.0-3.0Ω, and the voltage must be 0V (static). Move the seat forward and backward to confirm no wiring harness interference.
Seat adjustment chafed the wiring harness, causing a short circuit.
Connector corroded and shorted after wading
Wiring incorrectly connected after accident repair
Replaced airbag module due to internal short circuit