This DTC indicates the airbag control unit (SRS ECU) detects the front passenger seat belt pretensioner circuit resistance exceeds the calibrated upper limit (typically >3 — Qin Plus
This DTC indicates the airbag control unit (SRS ECU) detects the front passenger seat belt pretensioner circuit resistance exceeds the calibrated upper limit (typically >3.5Ω, standard value approximately 2.0Ω±0.4Ω).
Electrically, the pretensioner is essentially a squib consisting of a resistance wire and an igniter charge.
High resistance usually indicates high impedance or an open circuit.
Potential causes include a partially blown internal resistance wire in the pretensioner, increased connector contact resistance, or a hidden open circuit in the wiring harness.
This fault causes the SRS system to enter degraded mode: during a frontal collision, the front passenger seat belt fails to pretension automatically, and the system may suppress the front passenger airbag deployment strategy, severely compromising passive safety performance.
- 1Internal aging of the seat belt pretensioner assembly: Long-term vibration or thermal cycling oxidizes and thins the pretensioner igniter resistance wire, causing the resistance value to drift beyond the threshold.
- 2Poor wiring harness connector contact: Yellow SRS connector under the seat or at the B-pillar (usually beside the front passenger seat track or inside the lower B-pillar trim panel) has oxidized or loose pins, or the shorting bar fails to fully open, increasing contact resistance.
- 3Floor wiring harness damaged: Vehicle wading, carpet cleaning, or liquid spills in the front passenger area cause wiring harness corrosion; frequent forward and backward seat adjustment causes wiring harness fatigue and breakage (especially repeated bending resulting from a detached wiring harness retaining clip under the seat).
- 4SRS ECU sampling circuit error: Fault in the control unit internal A/D conversion circuit or sampling resistor causes resistance reading deviation (rule out via cross-checking).
- 5Improper modification or repair: Using non-genuine front passenger seat components or tapping into wiring to retrofit seat heating/ventilation systems adds series resistance to the pretensioner circuit or causes poor connections due to damaged insulation.
- 1Safety preparation: Set the vehicle to OFF, disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds for the SRS capacitor to fully discharge. Wear an anti-static wrist strap and disable wireless communication devices.
- 2Fault confirmation: Connect the VDS2000 or BYD dedicated diagnostic tool and read the fault code status. Confirm whether B1651-00 is an 'Active' or 'History' fault. If multiple SRS fault codes exist, troubleshoot common power supply and ground issues first.
- 3Physical location: Remove the front passenger seat (4 retaining bolts, torque usually 40-50 N·m) or the lower B-pillar trim panel. Locate the yellow-labeled pretensioner wiring harness connector (usually marked F-P/T or PRETENSIONER FR RH).
- 4Offline measurement: Disconnect the pretensioner connector and use a digital multimeter (low-resistance range, 0.1 Ω accuracy) to measure the resistance directly across the two terminals on the pretensioner side. The normal value is 1.6–2.4 Ω. If the resistance is >3.0 Ω or infinite, the pretensioner has failed; replace the seat belt assembly (the pretensioner cannot be replaced separately).
- 5Harness inspection: If the pretensioner unit resistance is normal, check the connector pins for oxidation or blackening and the female terminals for spreading. Measure continuity on the harness side from the connector to the SRS ECU (located under the center console or in the front compartment); resistance must be <1.0 Ω. Inspect the under-seat harness for wear within the seat rail movement range.
- 6Insulation check: Use a megohmmeter to measure the insulation resistance between the pretensioner circuit and body ground. The resistance must be >10MΩ. If the insulation value is low, inspect the wiring harness for chafing and shorts to the body.
- 7System reset: After repairing or replacing the faulty component, reconnect all connectors (listen for the locking 'click') and reinstall the seat. Connect the battery, turn the ignition to ON, use the diagnostic tool to clear the fault code, and perform 'SRS system configuration' (if installing a new component, write the VIN and configuration code).
- 8Function verification: Perform an SRS system self-diagnosis and confirm B1651-00 no longer appears. Verify the instrument panel airbag warning light turns off after the 6-second self-check. Use an SRS deployment simulation tool (such as a 10Ω resistor) to verify the ECU sampling circuit operates normally before performing a vehicle test.
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