DTC B176B1A indicates the left rear seat belt pretensioner circuit resistance falls below the standard threshold set by the SRS control unit (ACU) (typically 1 — Qin Plus
DTC B176B1A indicates the left rear seat belt pretensioner circuit resistance falls below the standard threshold set by the SRS control unit (ACU) (typically 1.5–3.0 Ω; the fault triggers below the lower limit).
This is an SRS hard fault, indicating a potential or actual short circuit in the pretensioner igniter circuit.
As a key passive safety system actuator, the pretensioner uses electrical current to trigger the igniter.
This ignites the gas generator to tighten the seat belt during a collision (within approximately 15–20 ms).
Low resistance may cause: 1) Unintended deployment (static electricity or electromagnetic interference causing accidental ignition); 2) The ACU to disable this trigger circuit in fail-safe mode, preventing seat belt pretensioning during a collision; 3) The ACU to lock out the entire SRS system if resistance drops near 0 Ω, disrupting the multi-airbag coordinated deployment strategy.
- 1Pretensioner igniter internal short circuit: Moisture ingress, electrolyte corrosion, or manufacturing defects cause the insulation between the igniter bridge wire and the housing to break down, forming a low-resistance path.
- 2Harness short to ground: Seat adjustment, crushing by objects, or water ingress damages the insulation of the left rear sill harness (B-pillar to C-pillar section), shorting the wire to the body ground.
- 3Connector terminal fault: Short circuit between terminals in the yellow SRS connector under the seat (usually near the left rear seat rail) caused by water ingress, oxidation, or mechanical damage.
- 4ACU internal sampling circuit fault: A damaged shunt resistor or A/D converter inside the airbag control unit causes a false low resistance reading.
- 5Parallel aftermarket equipment: Incorrectly connecting unauthorized seat heaters, massagers, or child seat anchorage devices in parallel to the SRS circuit decreases total resistance.
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the battery negative terminal and wait at least 3 minutes to fully discharge the ACU capacitor. Remove the left rear seat for access.
- 2Visual inspection: Check the left rear seat belt pretensioner connector (yellow) for looseness, water ingress, or corrosion; check the wiring harness inside the B-pillar trim for pinching or damage.
- 3Resistance measurement: Disconnect the ACU and pretensioner connectors. Use a digital multimeter (resistance setting) to directly measure the resistance between the two pretensioner terminals. Standard value: 2.0±0.3Ω. If <1.5Ω, replace the pretensioner.
- 4Insulation check: Measure the resistance between either pretensioner terminal and body ground. Resistance must be infinite (>1MΩ). If continuity exists, inspect the wiring harness for damaged insulation shorting to ground.
- 5Harness continuity test: Measure harness continuity between the ACU terminal and the pretensioner connector, and check for a short to ground. If necessary, use an oscilloscope to check for abnormal capacitive coupling.
- 6Replacement verification: If measured values are normal but the fault persists, replace the pretensioner assembly with a known good unit, or connect a dummy resistor (2.2Ω) to the ACU terminals to determine if the pretensioner or the ACU sampling circuit is faulty.
- 7System reset: After repair, reconnect all connectors and turn on the power. Use VDS or a dedicated diagnostic tool to clear the fault code. Perform the 'SRS System Configuration' and 'Pretensioner Resistance Learning' procedures (if applicable).
- 8Function verification: Perform a static test (ignition switch ON, instrument cluster self-check) and a dynamic test (simulate a collision signal and observe resistance value stability in the data stream). Confirm the fault code does not return.
Water ingress under left rear seat caused pretensioner short circuit
Aftermarket heated seats caused impedance anomaly
ACU internal sampling resistor drift causes false fault
B-pillar wiring harness chafed, short to ground