B164F-00 indicates the measured resistance of the front passenger seat belt pretensioner is 0 ohms, signifying a short circuit fault in the pretensioner circuit (short to ground or internal short) — Qin Plus
B164F-00 indicates the measured resistance of the front passenger seat belt pretensioner is 0 ohms, signifying a short circuit fault in the pretensioner circuit (short to ground or internal short).
In the SRS (airbag) system, normal pretensioner resistance is typically 2.0-3.0 ohms.
The ECU monitors circuit current to determine component status.
A 0-ohm resistance indicates an abnormal current path.
The ECU registers a short circuit fault, illuminates the airbag warning light, and may disable the passenger airbag and pretensioner functions, severely compromising occupant protection during a collision.
Differentiate this fault from "resistance too high" (open circuit).
A 0-ohm reading typically indicates a hard short circuit or a direct harness short to ground.
- 1Pretensioner internal short circuit: An internal short circuit in the front passenger seat belt pretensioner squib causes resistance to approach 0, usually due to component aging or manufacturing defects.
- 2Harness chafed to ground: Frequent fore-and-aft seat adjustment wears through the insulation on the pretensioner harness (yellow dedicated harness) under the front passenger seat, causing direct contact with body metal and a short to ground.
- 3Connector water ingress short circuit: Vehicle wading or improper cleaning causes water ingress at the pretensioner connector under the seat (usually near the seat slide rail), resulting in a short circuit between pins or a short to ground.
- 4SRS ECU internal monitoring circuit fault: A faulty internal monitoring chip or sampling resistor in the airbag control unit causes a false short circuit report; actual pretensioner resistance is normal.
- 5Incorrect operation: When directly measuring the pretensioner with a multimeter on the ohm setting, failing to follow specifications or a damaged pretensioner may result in a 0 Ω resistance reading. (Note: Never use a standard multimeter for measurement; use dedicated diagnostic equipment.)
- 1Safe power-down: Turn off the ignition switch, disconnect the negative battery terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds (to fully discharge the SRS capacitor). Never work on the airbag system while energized.
- 2Visual inspection: Remove the front passenger seat (or lift the seat carpet). Inspect the yellow SRS wiring harness under the seat for obvious wear, cuts, or crush marks, focusing on the seat slide rail mounting points and harness bend points.
- 3Connector inspection: Disconnect the pretensioner connector (special connector with a shorting bar). Inspect the connector interior for water ingress, corrosion, metallic foreign objects, or bent pins causing a short circuit. Clean or replace the connector if necessary.
- 4Resistance measurement: Measure the pretensioner unit resistance using a dedicated SRS diagnostic tool or a high-precision low-current ohmmeter (range <250mA). If the reading is 0 ohms, replace the front passenger seat belt assembly (including the pretensioner). If the reading is 2-3 ohms (normal), check the wiring harness.
- 5Wiring harness continuity test: Measure resistance to ground at the pretensioner harness terminal. Resistance must be infinite. If continuity exists (0 ohms), trace the circuit to locate the damage and repair or replace the wiring harness. Also measure continuity between both ends of the harness to rule out an open circuit.
- 6ECU verification: If the wiring harness and pretensioner are normal, connect a spare SRS ECU to determine if the control unit is reporting a false fault. If testing confirms an ECU fault, replace the airbag control module and perform coding configuration.
- 7System reset: After repair, reconnect all components and the battery. Use the diagnostic tool to clear fault codes and perform the SRS system self-check (normally, the warning lamp illuminates for 6 seconds and then turns off after turning the ignition switch ON). Perform a simulated crash test to verify.
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