DTC B1646-00 indicates the driver-side seat belt pretensioner circuit resistance is below the standard threshold set by the SRS control unit (typically 2 — Qin Plus
DTC B1646-00 indicates the driver-side seat belt pretensioner circuit resistance is below the standard threshold set by the SRS control unit (typically 2.0Ω±0.1Ω).
The pretensioner is a pyrotechnic actuator containing an igniter pellet and a heating wire; normal resistance is 1.5-3.0Ω.
Low resistance typically indicates a short circuit (such as a short to ground, a wire-to-wire short, or an internal pretensioner short), reducing current path resistance.
This fault forces the SRS system into a degraded mode.
During a collision, the system may fail to deploy the driver-side pretensioner or, in extreme cases, cause unintended deployment, severely compromising passive safety system functionality.
- 1Water ingress or moisture in the pretensioner connector: Water accumulation on the driver's side floor, car wash fluid intrusion, or air conditioning condensate leakage causes a short circuit between connector terminals, reducing circuit resistance.
- 2Wiring harness insulation damaged and shorted to ground: Frequent fore-aft seat adjustment causes the pretensioner wiring harness (typically routed along the seat track) to rub against the metal bracket. Damaged insulation causes the wire to short to the vehicle body ground.
- 3Connector terminal deformation or oxidation: Loose plugs, bent pins, or electrolytic corrosion cause abnormal conduction between terminals, creating a parallel resistance path.
- 4Pretensioner internal short circuit: Aging or moisture in the igniter heating wire insulation causes an internal inter-turn short circuit (uncommon, but requires inspection).
- 5SRS control unit sampling circuit fault: A faulty internal ECU A/D converter or sampling resistor causes an incorrect resistance reading (rule out via cross-checking).
- 1Safe power-off procedure: Turn off the ignition switch, disconnect the negative battery terminal and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Locate the pretensioner assembly: Remove the driver's seat (Qin series models usually require removing 4 retaining bolts), and find the yellow pretensioner connector under the seat (usually a 2-pin connector marked with an SRS label).
- 3Visual inspection: Check that the connector sealing ring is intact. Inspect the terminals for green oxidation, burn marks, or liquid ingress. Check the wiring harness sleeve for wear at the seat rail.
- 4Resistance measurement: Use a digital multimeter (0.1Ω accuracy) to measure the resistance between the pretensioner-side terminals. The normal value is 1.8-2.2Ω. A reading below 1.5Ω indicates an internal short circuit; replace the seat belt assembly.
- 5Insulation test: Measure the resistance between the pretensioner circuit and body ground. Resistance must exceed 1MΩ. If resistance is too low, strip the wiring harness section by section to locate the damage. Focus on the bend under the seat.
- 6Connector handling: If detecting water ingress, clean the terminals with electronic contact cleaner, blow dry, and apply conductive grease. Replace the connector housing if necessary (part number: BYD-SRS-CONN-01).
- 7System reset: After repair, reconnect the battery. Use a diagnostic tool (VDS2000 or Launch X431) to clear the fault code. Execute the 'SRS System Self-check' function. Confirm B1646-00 does not return and the airbag warning lamp turns off.
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