This fault code indicates the front passenger side airbag igniter circuit resistance measures 0 ohms, indicating a Short to Ground fault — Qin Plus
This fault code indicates the front passenger side airbag igniter circuit resistance measures 0 ohms, indicating a Short to Ground fault.
Normal airbag igniter resistance in the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) is typically 1.5-3.0 Ω.
A 0 ohm reading indicates a direct ground path in the circuit.
Damaged wiring harness insulation contacting ground, shorted connector terminals, or an internal short circuit in the airbag module igniter can cause this condition.
This fault triggers the SRS control unit fail-safe mode, illuminates the airbag warning light, and can prevent the passenger side airbag from deploying during a collision, severely compromising occupant side impact protection.
BYD E2/E3 and similar models use seat-integrated side airbags; frequent seat adjustment easily causes wiring harness fatigue damage.
- 1Front passenger seat side airbag wiring harness worn and short-circuited (seat rail pinching or long-term fatigue damages insulation, causing short to ground)
- 2Water ingress, corrosion, or poor terminal contact at the yellow SRS connector under the seat causing a short circuit (common after vehicle wading or improper interior cleaning)
- 3Side airbag module (gas generator) internal igniter short circuit failure (manufacturing defect or aging)
- 4SRS control unit internal detection circuit fault (control unit ECU chip damage or sampling resistor fault; relatively rare)
- 5Wiring harness crushed or pinched during front passenger seat modification or removal and installation, exposing the wire core and causing a short to ground.
- 1Use the BYD dedicated diagnostic tool (VDS2000/VDS2100) to read the complete DTC and freeze frame data. Confirm B163A1A is currently present and is a static fault. Record the environmental data at the time of the fault.
- 2Disconnect the battery negative terminal and wait at least 3 minutes for the SRS capacitor to fully discharge to ensure safety. Never directly measure the airbag circuit while powered on.
- 3Inspect the front passenger seat side airbag wiring harness (especially the yellow connector and harness sleeve at the seat-to-body connection) for wear, damaged insulation, or signs of crushing. Focus on the area near the seat slide rail mounting points.
- 4Disconnect the SRS connector under the seat (yellow plug, usually featuring a shorting clip). Bridge the circuit using a dedicated airbag load tool (2Ω simulated resistor). Restore power and read the fault code. If the fault changes to "resistance too high" or clears, the circuit is normal and the airbag module is faulty. If the fault remains, check the wiring harness for continuity to ground.
- 5Use a multimeter to measure the resistance to ground at both ends of the airbag wiring harness (measure the SRS ECU end and the airbag end separately) to check for a short to ground. Focus the inspection on the wiring harness near the seat slide rail and inside the B-pillar trim panel.
- 6If the wiring harness is damaged, repair it with high-temperature insulating tape or replace the wiring harness. If the airbag module has an internal short circuit, replace the front passenger side airbag module (replace the seat trim or side airbag assembly simultaneously, depending on vehicle structure; never disassemble the airbag module).
- 7Reconnect all connectors, ensure the yellow SRS plug locks into place (listen for a 'click'), and verify correct installation of the short-circuit protection tab.
- 8Connect the battery, use the diagnostic tool to clear the fault code, run the SRS system self-diagnosis procedure, and read the igniter resistance value. Confirm B163A1A does not return and the airbag warning lamp is off. Finally, perform a seat fore-and-aft adjustment test to confirm no wiring harness interference.
BYD E2 seat rail crushed wiring harness, causing short circuit
Water ingress corrosion in the passenger-side airbag connector of a BYD Qin EV.
Frequent seat adjustment caused wiring harness fatigue fracture in E3 commercial vehicle.
Replaced the passenger seat side airbag module to resolve the internal short circuit.
Misdiagnosed SRS control unit internal sampling circuit fault case