DTC B162A-00 indicates an abnormal left front seat side airbag ignition circuit resistance of 0 ohms, representing a short-to-ground fault — Qin Plus
DTC B162A-00 indicates an abnormal left front seat side airbag ignition circuit resistance of 0 ohms, representing a short-to-ground fault.
Normal airbag inflator resistance is 2.0-3.0 Ω.
A 0 Ω reading means the ignition circuit shorts to the vehicle body ground.
Potential causes include an internal airbag module short circuit, damaged wiring harness insulation shorting to ground, or shorted connector terminals.
This fault causes the SRS system to detect a risk of accidental ignition or deployment failure.
Consequently, the SRS system disables the airbag's collision protection function and illuminates the airbag warning light on the instrument cluster.
- 1Internal short circuit in seat side airbag igniter (short circuit in airbag module bridge wire or damp propellant)
- 2Prolonged friction during adjustment damages the wiring harness insulation under the seat or on the side of the backrest, causing a short circuit to the metal frame.
- 3Water ingress, oxidation, corrosion, or bent pins in the seat side airbag connector (usually located under or on the side of the seat) causing a short circuit between the positive and negative terminals.
- 4Internal fault in the SRS control unit sampling circuit, falsely reporting a low resistance fault.
- 5Driving the vehicle through water or directly spraying the side of the seat with a high-pressure washer caused water ingress and a short circuit in the connector.
- 1Safety preparation: Turn off the ignition, disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS backup power capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Fault freeze: Use the BYD VDS diagnostic tool to read the fault freeze-frame data. Record environmental parameters such as vehicle speed, temperature, and voltage at the time of the fault to determine if it is an intermittent fault.
- 3Visual inspection: Remove the left front seat assembly. Inspect the seat back side airbag label area and under-seat wiring harness for wear, crushing, damaged insulation, water ingress, or signs of modification.
- 4Resistance measurement: Disconnect the SRS ECU connector (located in the lower center console or center tunnel). Use a multimeter to measure the resistance of the left front seat side airbag circuit (refer to the workshop manual for pin assignments). Normal resistance is 2.0-3.0 Ω. A reading near 0 Ω confirms a short circuit.
- 5Section isolation: Disconnect the seat side airbag connector. Measure the resistance between the two airbag assembly terminals (to check for an internal short circuit) and the resistance to ground on the wiring harness side (to check for a short to ground).
- 6Insulation test: Use a megohmmeter to measure the insulation resistance between the wiring harness and body ground. The standard value must be greater than 1 MΩ.
- 7Repair/Replace: If the airbag shorts internally, replace the entire seat side airbag module (non-repairable). If the wiring harness is damaged, repair the harness, install corrugated conduit, and adjust the routing to prevent interference throughout the full range of fore-and-aft seat adjustment.
- 8System verification: Restore connections, install the battery, and turn the ignition switch ON. Use VDS to clear the fault code and perform the SRS system self-check (wait 30 seconds with the vehicle stationary). Confirm B162A-00 does not recur and the airbag warning lamp turns off.
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