DTC B178E12 indicates a short to power (B+) in the front passenger-side second-stage frontal airbag (PAB Stage 2) ignition circuit — Qin Plus
DTC B178E12 indicates a short to power (B+) in the front passenger-side second-stage frontal airbag (PAB Stage 2) ignition circuit.
The BYD SRS system uses a dual-stage airbag ignition design: the first stage provides a low-energy trigger, and the second stage provides a high-energy trigger for varying collision severities.
This DTC indicates an abnormal electrical connection to the vehicle power circuit within the wiring harness between the SRS control module and the front passenger airbag second-stage inflator (resistance below threshold, typically <2Ω).
This short circuit may cause: 1) unintended airbag deployment (extremely dangerous); 2) airbag deployment failure during a collision (due to bypassed current); 3) the SRS system to enter protection mode, disabling all airbag functions.
The BYD diagnostic protocol identifies the fault suffix '12' as 'Short to Battery+'.
- 1Front passenger airbag wiring harness insulation worn: Vibration, chafing, or improper assembly damages the harness outer sheath inside the dashboard, behind the A-pillar trim, or in the floor wiring channel, causing a short circuit through contact with a power wire (such as constant 12V+).
- 2Airbag connector water ingress or corrosion: The front passenger airbag connector (usually located behind the dashboard or glovebox) is poorly sealed. Driving through water, high-humidity environments, or A/C condensate leaks cause electrolytic corrosion between the terminals, forming a conductive path.
- 3Internal short circuit in the clock spring: On vehicles equipped with an integrated clock spring, damaged insulation between the internal flat cable layers shorts the airbag ignition circuit to the horn/multifunction switch power supply wire.
- 4SRS control module internal driver circuit fault: Internal breakdown of the airbag driver chip (such as a dedicated NXP or Infineon IC) or a false report from the ignition circuit monitoring circuit causes a false short-to-power signal.
- 5Incorrect wiring after accident repairs: After replacing the dashboard, center console, or front wiring harness, repair personnel mistakenly connected the airbag wiring harness in parallel with permanent live circuits, such as the instrument lighting or cigarette lighter power supplies.
- 1Safety Preparation and Diagnostic Confirmation: Use a BYD VDS or Launch X431 diagnostic tool to read the complete fault codes. Confirm B178E12 is a current fault (not a history fault). Record freeze frame data (including vehicle speed, collision signal status, etc.). Disconnect the battery negative terminal and wait at least 3 minutes to fully discharge the SRS capacitor.
- 2Wiring harness visual inspection: Remove the passenger-side lower dashboard trim panel, glove box, and lower A-pillar trim panel. Carefully inspect the airbag wiring harness (typically wrapped in yellow corrugated conduit) for wear, crushing, or burn marks. Focus inspection on contact points between the wiring harness and the dashboard metal bracket, air conditioning duct, and sharp body edges.
- 3Connector inspection: Disconnect the front passenger airbag module connector (located behind the dashboard; remove the retaining bolts) and the SRS control module connector (usually located in the centre tunnel or under the centre console). Inspect the terminals for signs of water ingress, green corrosion, or deformed pins. Clean with compressed air and apply a dedicated electronic contact protectant.
- 4Circuit measurement verification: Use a multimeter in resistance mode to measure the resistance between the second-stage airbag ignition wires (usually marked PAB Stage 2+ and PAB Stage 2-) at the SRS module connector and the vehicle power supply (B+). Normal resistance is infinity (OL). A reading <10kΩ indicates a short circuit. Test the circuit in sections to locate the short (clock spring, inline harness connectors, or the airbag module itself).
- 5Component replacement test: If the wiring harness is normal, replace the original airbag module with a known-good front passenger airbag simulator (resistance 2Ω±0.5Ω). Clear the fault code and power on for a self-check. If the fault disappears, replace the airbag module. If the fault remains, replace the SRS control module or repair the wiring harness.
- 6System verification and calibration: After completing the repair, reconnect all connectors and the battery. Use the diagnostic tool to perform 'SRS system self-diagnosis' and 'configuration reset' (write the VIN if replacing the control module). Confirm the fault code clears and does not recur, and verify the airbag warning light turns off after 6 seconds.
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