DTC B168600 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System/airbag) control module detects an abnormal configuration status in "Circuit 2" (typically the front passenger-side airbag deployment circuit) — Qin Plus
DTC B168600 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System/airbag) control module detects an abnormal configuration status in "Circuit 2" (typically the front passenger-side airbag deployment circuit).
In the BYD Qin PRO airbag architecture, the control module determines system status by monitoring circuit resistance (standard value 2.0–3.0 Ω) and configuration data. "Invalid configuration" means the control module reads a circuit resistance outside the threshold (open circuit >10 Ω or short circuit <1 Ω), or detects circuit configuration data that does not match the vehicle VIN or lacks correct coding.
This fault may prevent the passenger-side airbag from deploying properly during a collision.
The system also illuminates the instrument cluster airbag warning light and may disable the entire airbag system to enter fail-safe mode.
- 1Resistance drift or damage to the internal igniter in the front passenger-side airbag module causes abnormal circuit resistance.
- 2The yellow connector between the floor wiring harness and the airbag module (usually located behind the glove box or on the right side of the center console) is loose, oxidized, corroded by water ingress, or has backed-out pins.
- 3Internal open or short circuit in the spiral cable (clock spring) affecting the circuit 2 signal transmission path.
- 4Outdated SRS control unit (ACU) software or hardware fault causing incorrect monitoring judgment for circuit 2.
- 5Airbag wiring harness connector terminal corrosion caused by vehicle wading, interior water ingress, or high humidity.
- 1Use the BYD dedicated diagnostic tool (VDS2000/VDS3000) to read all DTCs. Confirm B168600 is a current fault, not a history fault, and record the circuit resistance value from the freeze frame data.
- 2Disconnect the battery negative cable and wait at least 3 minutes for the SRS capacitor to fully discharge to prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 3Remove the glovebox or the right trim panel of the center console. Inspect the passenger-side airbag wiring harness connector (yellow marking) for looseness, water ingress, or oxidized pins. Clean and reconnect if necessary.
- 4Disconnect the airbag module connector and use a multimeter to measure the resistance of circuit 2 on the wiring harness side. Normal resistance is 2.0-3.0Ω. Measure the insulation resistance to ground and to the power supply; it must be greater than 1MΩ.
- 5Check clock spring (spiral cable) continuity, especially the circuit 2 pins connecting to the passenger-side airbag, and inspect for internal open or short circuits.
- 6If wiring harness measurements are normal, check the SRS control module software version and compare it with the BYD Technical Service Bulletin (TSB). Update to the latest software version if necessary.
- 7After replacing the faulty component (airbag module, wiring harness, or ACU), use the diagnostic tool to perform the 'SRS System Configuration' or 'Airbag Coding' function to ensure the new component matches the vehicle.
- 8Clear the fault code, reconnect the battery, and turn the ignition switch ON. Observe if the airbag warning lamp turns off after the self-check, then perform a system self-check cycle for verification.
BYD Qin Pro DM passenger-side airbag connector pin backed out
Qin PRO petrol SRS control module software fault
Airbag wiring harness corrosion on water-wading vehicle
Replaced passenger airbag without configuration, causing fault.