DTC B162C indicates the driver side airbag ignition circuit resistance exceeds the normal upper limit set by the SRS control unit (typically >3 — Qin Plus
DTC B162C indicates the driver side airbag ignition circuit resistance exceeds the normal upper limit set by the SRS control unit (typically >3.5Ω; normal value 1.5-3.0Ω).
The SRS ECU continuously monitors the airbag inflator (gas generator) circuit resistance via its internal detection circuit.
Excessive resistance indicates poor contact, a partial open circuit, or inflator aging within the ignition circuit.
This condition may prevent the circuit current from reaching the ignition threshold (typically 1.5-2.0A required) during a collision.
This fault prevents the side airbag from deploying normally in a crash.
Repair this safety-critical fault immediately.
- 1Fatigue fracture or poor contact of the internal flat cable in the clock spring (spiral cable). This is the most common point of failure for the driver airbag, especially in vehicles with frequent steering wheel rotation.
- 2Driver's seat side airbag module (gas generator) internal resistance increases due to aging, or moisture in the internal igniter charge causes the resistance value to shift.
- 3The dedicated yellow SRS connector under the seat or at the B-pillar (usually fitted with a shorting bar) exhibits looseness, oxidation, water ingress, or backed-out pins, causing increased contact resistance.
- 4Long-term mechanical movement at the seat slide rail or steering column partially fractures the copper strands in the airbag wiring harness (not completely broken, but effective cross-sectional area reduced).
- 5Vehicle wading or high-humidity exposure caused slight corrosion inside the wiring harness connector, forming an oxide layer that increases contact resistance.
- 1Safe power-down: Turn off the ignition, disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Fault confirmation: Use the BYD ED400/ED600 diagnostic tool to read the live data stream, record the current resistance value (normal: 1.5-3.0 Ω; fault: typically >3.5 Ω or indicates an open circuit), and check the freeze frame to confirm the vehicle status when the fault occurred.
- 3Visual inspection: Check the clock spring connector under the steering wheel and the SRS connector under the seat for looseness, water ingress, corrosion, backed-out pins, or an unreleased shorting bar.
- 4Segmented measurement method: Disconnect the airbag module connector. Use a digital multimeter to measure the resistance of the module itself (should be 1.5-3.0 Ω); measure the wiring harness side resistance (clock spring to SRS ECU) (should be <1 Ω); turn the steering wheel to measure clock spring continuity (should be <1 Ω throughout the full range).
- 5Replacement test: Connect a dedicated 2-3Ω airbag substitute resistor (or a known-good airbag module) to the wiring harness. Clear the fault code and observe if it returns to isolate the fault to the wiring harness or the module.
- 6Targeted repair: Based on measurement results, replace the clock spring (most common), repair the wiring harness (soldering + heat-shrink tubing), clean the connector, or replace the airbag module.
- 7System verification: Reconnect all components and the battery. Clear the fault codes. Perform the SRS system self-check (turn the ignition switch to the ON position and verify the airbag warning light turns off after 6 seconds). Road test the vehicle to confirm the fault does not recur.
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