DTC B1647 indicates the driver-side seat belt pretensioner circuit resistance exceeds the upper limit set by the SRS control unit (standard value typically 2 — Qin Plus
DTC B1647 indicates the driver-side seat belt pretensioner circuit resistance exceeds the upper limit set by the SRS control unit (standard value typically 2.0-3.0 Ω; refer to the vehicle workshop manual).
The seat belt pretensioner uses a pyrotechnic squib; its resistance reflects the electrical integrity of the firing element.
High resistance indicates an additional high-impedance point in the circuit.
Potential causes include an aging or broken internal pretensioner resistance wire, oxidized or corroded harness connectors, internal wire breaks, or poor contact.
This fault causes the SRS system to deem the pretensioner circuit unreliable.
During a collision, the pretensioner may fail to deploy, preventing the seat belt from retracting in time and severely compromising occupant protection.
- 1Internal aging of the seat belt pretensioner assembly: Time, temperature, or manufacturing defects cause the internal resistance wire to oxidize and break, gradually increasing the resistance value.
- 2Poor wiring harness connector contact: Oxidation, looseness, or water ingress corrosion increases contact resistance at the pretensioner connector under the driver-side B-pillar or seat.
- 3Wiring harness mechanical damage: Frequent fore-and-aft seat adjustment or improper removal/installation of the B-pillar trim causes fatigue fractures in the internal copper strands (outer insulation intact but internal strands partially broken), resulting in high resistance.
- 4Water ingress or moisture corrosion: After the vehicle drives through water, poor sealing of the pretensioner connector causes terminal oxidation, creating additional resistance.
- 5Non-genuine parts or improper repair: Using an aftermarket pretensioner (resistance tolerance exceeds specifications) or failing to fully seat the connector after previous accident repairs.
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the battery negative terminal and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS backup power supply and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Visual inspection: Remove the driver-side lower B-pillar trim panel and check the seat belt pretensioner wiring harness connector (usually located at the base of the B-pillar or under the seat) for looseness, oxidation, or water ingress.
- 3Resistance measurement: Use a dedicated SRS system tester to measure the resistance between the pretensioner connector terminals (never measure directly using a standard multimeter resistance setting, as this may trigger the pretensioner). Compare the reading against the standard value (typically 2.0±0.1Ω or 2.0-3.0Ω).
- 4Harness continuity test: Disconnect the SRS ECU connector and measure harness continuity between the ECU and the pretensioner connector. Check for high resistance or intermittent open circuits.
- 5Cross-check: Swap the driver-side and passenger-side pretensioner connectors (if the vehicle model supports this). Observe if the fault code transfers to confirm whether the fault lies in the pretensioner assembly or the wiring harness.
- 6Component replacement: If the pretensioner unit resistance exceeds the specified limit, replace the OEM driver seat belt pretensioner assembly; if the wiring harness is faulty, repair or replace the wiring harness.
- 7System reset: Reconnect all connectors, connect the battery, use the diagnostic tool to clear the fault code, and perform the 'SRS System Configuration' or 'Crash Detection Sensor Calibration' procedure.
- 8Functional verification: Start the vehicle. Confirm the airbag warning light turns off after the self-check. Adjust the seat position multiple times and confirm the fault code does not recur.
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