DTC B163212 indicates a short to battery positive (B+) in the front passenger seat side airbag ignition circuit — Qin Plus
DTC B163212 indicates a short to battery positive (B+) in the front passenger seat side airbag ignition circuit.
Technically, this means an abnormal connection to the permanent 12V supply exists in the wiring harness or connectors between the airbag control module (SRS ECU) and the front passenger seat side airbag.
Normally, the airbag igniter terminals maintain a high resistance (>10kΩ) in the non-deployed state or only receive a low-current monitoring signal from the ECU.
A short to power causes the following: 1) The SRS system enters protection mode, cutting power to this circuit to prevent unintended deployment; 2) The front passenger seat side airbag completely fails, preventing deployment during a side impact; 3) A potential unintended deployment risk arises.
Although the ECU typically features short-circuit protection, a continuous short to power can overheat and damage the control module's internal driver chip.
ISO 26262 classifies this fault as a high Automotive Safety Integrity Level (ASIL D) fault, requiring immediate resolution.
- 1Wiring harness chafing under the front passenger seat or inside the B-pillar trim panel: Fore/aft seat adjustment or passenger foot movement damages the harness insulation, causing a short circuit to body power wires (such as the seat heating wire or constant power supply wire).
- 2Airbag connector (dedicated yellow plug) water ingress or corrosion: Vehicle wading, a blocked sunroof drain tube, or improper interior cleaning causes liquid to enter the connector under the front passenger seat, resulting in electrolytic corrosion and a short circuit between the terminals.
- 3SRS control module (ACU) internal power drive transistor breakdown: A hardware fault in the ECU internal ignition drive circuit causes the output terminal to continuously output a high-level voltage.
- 4Non-professional modifications: Improper wire splicing when installing seat ventilation/heating, ambient lighting, or dash cams accidentally shorts the airbag wiring harness to constant power, or mounting screws pierce the wiring harness insulation.
- 5Front passenger side airbag assembly internal igniter insulation failure: Short circuit between the airbag inflator igniter tube and the housing or power terminal (low probability, but possible in accident-damaged or older vehicles).
- 1Safety Preparation: Turn off the ignition switch, disconnect the low-voltage battery negative terminal, wait at least 90 seconds (120 seconds for some models) to fully discharge the SRS capacitor, and wear an anti-static wrist strap.
- 2Fault confirmation: Connect the BYD VDS or Launch X-431 diagnostic tool, read the fault code, record the freeze frame data, and confirm B163212 is a current fault (Active), not a history fault (History).
- 3Initial visual inspection: Remove the front passenger seat (or B-pillar lower trim) and check the yellow SRS connector (usually marked PAB or SAB) for signs of water ingress, oxidation, looseness, or physical damage.
- 4Circuit isolation test: Disconnect the front passenger side airbag connector. Use a multimeter to measure the resistance from both terminals of the harness-side connector to body ground and to the constant power supply (+12V). Normal resistance is greater than 10kΩ. Continuity or low resistance indicates a short circuit in the wiring harness or ECU side.
- 5Inspect the wiring harness section by section: trace the harness upward along the front passenger seat rail, sill trim panel, and B-pillar. Check the insulation condition at contact points with the seat metal frame, harness retaining clips, and aftermarket wiring harnesses to locate damaged areas.
- 6ECU-side diagnosis: If the wiring harness tests normal (no short to power), reconnect the airbag connector and measure the circuit output at the ECU side. If abnormal voltage remains, this indicates an internal SRS ECU fault.
- 7Fault repair: Repair the damaged wiring harness (use high-temperature insulating tape and heat-shrink tubing; maintain the twisted-pair configuration), replace corroded connectors (use genuine parts), or replace the faulty SRS control module/airbag assembly.
- 8System reset and verification: Reconnect all components, restore the battery connection, and clear the fault code. Perform the 'SRS system self-check' or 'crash sensor calibration' procedure. Verify B163212 does not return and the airbag warning lamp turns off normally.
- 9Final confirmation: Perform a road test, simulate vehicle vibration conditions, and read the fault codes again to confirm no intermittent faults exist.
Seat rail wiring harness chafing caused intermittent short circuit.
Corroded connectors caused a short circuit after driving through water
Aftermarket seat heater installation caused a wiring short circuit
SRS control module internal driver circuit fault
B-pillar trim panel clip pinched the wiring harness, causing a short circuit.