DTC B164F1A indicates the Airbag Control Unit (ACU) detects a front passenger seat belt pretensioner circuit resistance of 0 ohms or close to 0 ohms, determining a short circuit fault — Qin Plus
DTC B164F1A indicates the Airbag Control Unit (ACU) detects a front passenger seat belt pretensioner circuit resistance of 0 ohms or close to 0 ohms, determining a short circuit fault.
The pretensioner contains a pyrotechnic squib with a normal resistance between 1.5 and 3.0 Ω.
A resistance of 0 indicates an internal short circuit in the pretensioner, a wiring harness short to ground, or a pin-to-pin short at the connector.
This fault prevents the SRS system from triggering the front passenger seat belt pretensioner during a collision (failing to tighten the seat belt).
In extreme cases, the short circuit illuminates the airbag warning light continuously and locks the entire airbag system, severely compromising passive safety performance.
- 1Pretensioner squib internal short circuit: Damaged heating wire insulation inside the pretensioner body shorts the positive and negative terminals, typically caused by manufacturing defects or hidden damage from an unreplaced pretensioner after an accident.
- 2Wiring harness damaged and shorted to ground: Frequent seat sliding, crushing by foreign objects, or abrasion against metal edges damages the pretensioner wiring harness under the front passenger seat or inside the B-pillar trim panel, breaching the insulation and shorting the harness to the vehicle body ground.
- 3Connector water ingress causing corrosion and short circuit: Vehicle wading, car washing, or a sunroof leak allows water to enter the pretensioner connector (usually located below the B-pillar or under the seat), causing electrolytic conduction between the pins and creating a short circuit.
- 4SRS control unit internal fault: A damaged ACU internal monitoring circuit falsely reports a short circuit, while actual pretensioner and wiring harness resistance is normal.
- 5Improper accident repair: Failing to fully disconnect the pretensioner connector when replacing the front passenger airbag or seat belt after an accident, causing a short circuit, or using an aftermarket pretensioner with an incorrect resistance value.
- 1Safe power-down: Turn off the ignition switch, disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal, and wait at least 3 minutes to fully discharge the SRS system high-voltage capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Fault confirmation: Connect the VDS2000 or Launch X-431 diagnostic tool, read the SRS system fault codes, and confirm B164F1A is a current fault that returns after clearing.
- 3Locate the pretensioner: Determine the front passenger seat belt pretensioner location based on the vehicle model (E2/E3/Qin EV) (usually integrated into the seat belt retractor, located below the B-pillar or on the outer side of the seat). Remove the lower B-pillar trim panel or seat side trim panel.
- 4Connector inspection: Disconnect the pretensioner connector and visually inspect the inside of the connector for signs of water ingress, terminal corrosion, Green Crimp (verdigris), or bent terminals causing a short circuit. If necessary, clean with electrical contact cleaner.
- 5Resistance measurement: Measure the pretensioner body resistance (connector side) using a multimeter. Normal resistance is 1.5-3.0Ω. If the reading is 0-0.5Ω, replace the pretensioner. Also measure the resistance to ground on the wiring harness side. Resistance should be infinite. If continuity exists, repair the wiring harness.
- 6Wiring harness inspection: Follow the pretensioner wiring harness routing (via the floor wiring harness to the ACU) and check for pinched, damaged, or chafed points. Focus on the areas near the seat slide rail and B-pillar pass-through. Repair and re-wrap any damaged wiring harness.
- 7Insulation test: Use a megohmmeter to measure the insulation resistance between the pretensioner circuit and the vehicle body. Resistance must exceed 1MΩ to rule out intermittent short circuits.
- 8Component replacement: If testing confirms an internal short circuit in the pretensioner, replace the OEM front passenger seat belt assembly (pretensioners are typically unavailable separately; replace the entire seat belt retractor assembly). Verify the part number matches the vehicle model.
- 9System verification: Reconnect all connectors and the battery negative terminal. Use the diagnostic tool to clear the fault code and perform an SRS system self-test. Verify DTC B164F1A does not return and the airbag warning lamp turns off.
- 10Function test: Perform a simulated crash test (use the diagnostic tool to execute the active test function to check circuit continuity only, without actual deployment) or conduct a road test to confirm normal system operation.
BYD E2 front passenger pretensioner connector oxidised and shorted
Qin EV seat rail pinched the pretensioner wiring harness, causing a short circuit.
Passenger pretensioner internally shorted after accident repair
Liquid corrosion shorted the pins of the front passenger pretensioner connector.
Wiring harness near front passenger seat belt buckle chafed through and shorted