DTC B163111 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control module detects an abnormally low-resistance path to body ground (short to ground) in the front passenger side airbag squib circuit (typically the seat side airbag or curtain airbag) — Qin Plus
DTC B163111 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control module detects an abnormally low-resistance path to body ground (short to ground) in the front passenger side airbag squib circuit (typically the seat side airbag or curtain airbag).
Under normal operating conditions, the airbag squib circuit resistance must remain around 2-3 Ω, and the insulation resistance to ground must exceed 1 MΩ.
The control module logs a short to ground when it detects circuit resistance approaching 0 Ω or current leaking to ground.
This fault prevents the side airbag from deploying during a side-impact collision, eliminating side-impact protection for the occupant.
The circuit abnormality also creates a potential risk of unintended deployment, although a short to ground typically causes a non-deployment failure rather than accidental triggering.
This fault constitutes a severe active safety system failure.
Remove the vehicle from service immediately until repaired.
- 1Long-term chafing or pinching damages the airbag wiring harness insulation near the front passenger seat slide rail or B-pillar, causing the wire to directly contact the vehicle body metal.
- 2Internal water ingress and oxidation in the under-seat airbag wiring harness connector (usually located where the seat meets the floor) due to driving through water or improper cleaning, or misaligned or loose pins, causing a short to ground.
- 3Internal short circuit in the front passenger side airbag module squib, causing one of the two terminals to short to ground.
- 4During vehicle modification (such as adding seat heating, ventilation, leather trim, or audio upgrades), screws or clips pierce the wiring harness, or improper securing allows the harness to contact sharp metal edges.
- 5Non-standard routing of the airbag wiring harness after accident repairs causes dynamic interference with the seat adjustment mechanism, resulting in insulation wear.
- 1Safe power-down: Turn off the ignition switch, disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds (120 seconds for some models) to fully discharge the SRS capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Initial visual inspection: Check the airbag wiring harness connectors (usually marked yellow) under the front passenger seat, at the bottom of the B-pillar trim panel, and inside the sill trim panel for obvious damage, water ingress, terminal corrosion, or loose connections.
- 3Disconnect the airbag module: Carefully remove the front passenger side airbag module (located on the outer side of the seat or inside the door panel) and disconnect its connector. Never use a multimeter to measure the airbag module terminals directly (current may trigger deployment). Measure only the wiring harness side.
- 4Harness-to-ground resistance measurement: Use a high-impedance digital multimeter to measure the resistance between each pin on the harness-side connector and body ground. The normal value should be greater than 1 MΩ. If the resistance is lower than 1 Ω, this confirms a short to ground.
- 5Section-by-section isolation check: Disconnect the intermediate connector along the wiring path (usually below the B-pillar or under the seat). Measure each section to narrow down the fault area and determine whether the short circuit is in the seat section, B-pillar section, or dashboard section.
- 6Airbag module inspection: Use a dedicated SRS diagnostic tool or specified adapter to measure the resistance between the two terminals of the airbag module (normal: 2-3 Ω) and the insulation to ground of each terminal. If the module has internal continuity to ground, replace the module.
- 7Wiring harness repair and replacement: Repair damaged wiring harness insulation using waterproof heat-shrink tubing. If the harness has multiple damaged areas or broken internal copper wires, replace the entire airbag wiring harness. After repair, re-secure the wiring harness and ensure sufficient clearance from the seat slide rails and metal brackets.
- 8System verification: Restore all connections and reconnect the battery. Use the BYD VDS or a generic scan tool to clear the fault code. Perform the SRS system self-check cycle. Confirm DTC B163111 does not return and the airbag warning light turns off.
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