DTC B164F indicates the measured circuit resistance of the front passenger side (front right) seat belt pretensioner is 0 ohms — Qin Plus
DTC B164F indicates the measured circuit resistance of the front passenger side (front right) seat belt pretensioner is 0 ohms.
In BYD SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) circuit logic, a 0-ohm resistance typically indicates a short to ground or a low-impedance short, rather than an open circuit.
The pretensioner contains a squib and heating wire; normal resistance is 1.5-3.0 Ω.
This fault causes the SRS control module to register an abnormal pretensioner circuit, meaning the pretensioner may fail to tension the seat belt during a collision.
The instrument cluster AIRBAG/SRS warning light remains illuminated, the system enters fail-safe mode, and the SRS module may simultaneously disable the front airbags, severely compromising occupant protection.
- 1Water ingress, oxidation, or bent metal terminals at the pretensioner wiring harness connector under the front passenger seat causing a short circuit between positive and negative terminals.
- 2Insulation breakdown of the seat belt pretensioner internal heating wire causes an internal short circuit (squib fault)
- 3Long-term friction from the seat rail adjustment mechanism damages the wiring harness insulation, causing the core wire to directly contact the body ground.
- 4Internal fault in the SRS control module (ACU) sampling circuit causing a false low resistance reading.
- 5Using a multimeter resistance setting to directly measure the pretensioner connector during repair (violating safety procedures and causing damage from static electricity or current), or failing to fully lock the connector after seat removal and installation, causing the terminal to contact the metal bracket.
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal and wait at least 90 seconds to ensure the SRS capacitor fully discharges and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Visual inspection: Remove the front passenger seat (or lift the front of the seat). Inspect the yellow pretensioner connector (usually located on the outer side or bottom of the seat) for looseness, water ingress, corrosion, or foreign objects causing a terminal short circuit. Inspect the wiring harness for wear at the seat slide rail.
- 3Disconnect the pretensioner: Carefully disconnect the pretensioner connector. Connect a dedicated airbag resistor simulator (2Ω) to the SRS module side wiring harness. Power on the vehicle and read the fault codes. If the fault code becomes intermittent or disappears, the wiring harness to the ACU has no short circuit. The fault lies in the pretensioner body or connector.
- 4Resistance measurement: Use a digital multimeter to measure the resistance between the two terminals of the pretensioner body. Normal value: 1.5-3.0 Ω. Measure the resistance between either terminal and vehicle body ground; it must be infinite (OL). If the body resistance is 0 or there is continuity to ground, replace the pretensioner assembly.
- 5Harness continuity check: Disconnect both ends of the wire and test the pretensioner harness circuit for a short to ground. Closely inspect the insulation at the bent section under the seat.
- 6Component replacement and verification: Replace the faulty pretensioner (use genuine parts; do not disassemble or repair). Reconnect all connectors, clear the DTC, and perform a full seat travel adjustment test. Confirm the SRS warning lamp turns off normally at IGN ON (turns off after a 6-second self-check).
Seat cleaning caused water ingress into the connector, resulting in a short circuit
Seat adjustment mechanism crushed wiring harness, causing intermittent short circuit.
Pretensioner internal squib short circuit — replace assembly