DTC B1641 indicates an abnormally low-resistance path to body ground (short circuit) in the driver-side seat belt pretensioner ignition circuit — Qin Plus
DTC B1641 indicates an abnormally low-resistance path to body ground (short circuit) in the driver-side seat belt pretensioner ignition circuit.
In the BYD SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) architecture, the pretensioner is a pyrotechnic safety device with a normal squib resistance of approximately 2.0-3.0 Ω.
The SRS control unit triggers this DTC when it detects the circuit resistance to ground falls below the threshold (typically <1.0 Ω).
This fault forces the SRS into fail-safe mode: the airbag warning lamp remains illuminated, and the fault may completely disable the system.
During a collision, the pretensioner fails to deploy and retract the seat belt, severely threatening occupant safety.
Furthermore, a continuous short to ground can overheat and damage the internal driver circuit of the SRS control unit, expanding the repair scope.
- 1Worn insulation on the pretensioner wiring harness under the driver's seat contacts the metal seat frame or seat track, causing a short to ground. This commonly occurs on vehicles with frequent seat adjustments or detached harness retaining clips.
- 2Water ingress, corroded pins, or bent pins in the yellow SRS connector under the seat (usually on the inner side of the seat rail) causing a short circuit between the signal wire and ground wire. This typically occurs after driving through water or deep interior cleaning.
- 3Manufacturing defects or aging of the seat belt pretensioner internal igniter cause an internal short to ground. This commonly affects aftermarket parts installed during accident repairs or components degraded by prolonged exposure to high temperatures.
- 4Breakdown of the SRS control unit internal detection circuit or driver transistor causes a false short-to-ground report, usually occurring simultaneously with other SRS fault codes.
- 5Damage to the floor wiring harness sheath where it passes through the firewall or seat crossmember allows the wire to contact vehicle body metal. This commonly occurs after chassis bottoming out or improper harness routing during seat modification.
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the battery negative terminal and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS capacitor and prevent accidental deployment. Before disconnecting, record the radio presets and one-touch window up/down positions.
- 2Fault confirmation: Connect the VDS or dedicated diagnostic tool. Confirm DTC B1641 is a current fault (Active). Record the ambient temperature and operating voltage from the Freeze Frame data.
- 3Initial inspection: Remove the driver's seat (keep the wiring harness connected). Locate the yellow SRS connector (usually marked DAB or Pretensioner). Measure the resistance between the pretensioner terminals (normal: 2.0-3.0Ω) and the resistance from each terminal to ground (should be >1MΩ).
- 4Wiring harness physical inspection: Carefully inspect the wiring harness sleeve behind and on the inner side of the seat slide rail for damage. Check for interference wear between the seat height adjustment motor harness and the pretensioner harness. Check for detached wiring harness retaining clips.
- 5In-depth connector inspection: Disconnect the connector and inspect the pins for oxidation, push-out, or electrolyte corrosion. Measure continuity to ground on the harness side of the connector. If necessary, clean with electrical contact cleaner and blow dry.
- 6Component isolation test: Disconnect the pretensioner connector and connect a 2-3Ω dedicated shorting resistor (load tool) in place of the pretensioner. If the fault code changes to open circuit (B1640/B1643), the pretensioner assembly has an internal short circuit. Replace the pretensioner assembly.
- 7Wiring harness continuity test: If the short to ground fault remains after installing the shorting resistor, measure the resistance to ground of the wiring between the connector and the SRS control unit. Check the intermediate adapter connector (usually located under the carpet or in the A-pillar) for water ingress.
- 8Control unit check: After confirming the wiring harness has no short circuit, measure the resistance to ground at the corresponding pin of the SRS control unit. If abnormal, replace the SRS ECU. After replacement, perform VIN writing, configuration coding, and crash sensor calibration.
- 9Repair verification: After repair, clear the fault code and perform an SRS system self-check (cycle the ignition 3 times and confirm the warning lamp turns off after the 6-second self-check). Perform a full-travel seat adjustment test (fore/aft, up/down, backrest angle) to ensure no interference.
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