DTC B179C indicates an abnormally low-resistance connection between the ignition circuit of the front passenger-side seat belt second stage pretensioner and body ground — Qin Plus
DTC B179C indicates an abnormally low-resistance connection between the ignition circuit of the front passenger-side seat belt second stage pretensioner and body ground.
In the BYD SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) architecture, a twisted pair typically connects the second stage pretensioner to the Airbag Control Unit (ACU), with a normal resistance of approximately 2.0–3.0 Ω.
The ACU sets this DTC when it detects the circuit-to-ground resistance falls below the threshold (typically <1.0 Ω).
This fault causes: 1) unintentional pretensioner deployment in non-collision situations, causing personal injury; 2) failure of the pretensioner to deploy correctly during a collision; 3) the ACU to enter fault protection mode, which may subsequently disable the front passenger airbag and side curtain airbags, greatly reducing crash safety.
This is a hard fault; once confirmed, it continuously illuminates the SRS warning lamp.
- 1Worn wiring harness under the seat: Long-term friction from the front passenger seat fore-and-aft adjustment mechanism damages the pretensioner wiring harness insulation. The copper core contacts the seat rail or body metal, creating a short to ground.
- 2Pinched wiring harness inside B-pillar trim panel: Trim panel clips or metal edges crushed the incorrectly secured wiring harness during B-pillar interior trim panel removal and installation or body sheet metal repair, causing a short to ground.
- 3Connector terminal corrosion due to water ingress: Driving through water or a blocked sunroof drain causes water to accumulate on the front passenger floor. The seal on the pretensioner connector (usually located under the seat or at the base of the B-pillar) fails, forming an electrolytic corrosion path between the terminals.
- 4Pretensioner internal fault: Internal squib bridge wire shorted to the housing. Typically occurs after a severe collision or due to a manufacturing defect (low occurrence rate, but requires inspection).
- 5SRS control unit internal drive circuit fault: ACU internal ignition drive transistor breakdown or faulty ground monitoring circuit causes a false fault (verify by substitution).
- 1Safety preparation: Turn off the ignition switch, disconnect the negative battery terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds (to fully discharge the SRS capacitor). Wear an anti-static wrist strap. Do not use radio equipment near the airbag/pretensioner.
- 2Fault confirmation and freeze frame analysis: Use a dedicated BYD diagnostic tool (VDS or ED400) to read the B179C freeze frame data. Record the vehicle speed, temperature, and voltage at the time of the fault. Confirm whether the fault is intermittent or continuous.
- 3Visual and harness inspection: Inspect the wiring harness under the front passenger seat, at the base of the B-pillar, and along the floor. Focus on contact points between the harness, seat slide rails, and metal brackets. Look for wear, damaged insulation, or crush marks. Inspect connectors for looseness or water ingress.
- 4Circuit isolation test: Disconnect the front passenger second-stage pretensioner connector (yellow connector, usually under the seat or at the B-pillar). Use a multimeter to measure resistance between the wiring harness side and ground: if resistance is <5 Ω, the wiring harness has a short to ground; if resistance is infinite, measure resistance at the pretensioner end. Normal resistance is 2.0 ± 0.5 Ω. If resistance is <1 Ω or infinite, replace the pretensioner.
- 5Wiring harness repair: If the wiring harness is damaged, repair it with heat-shrink tubing or waterproof tape. Reroute the harness to maintain a clearance of more than 20mm from metal components. Replace damaged retaining clips and install abrasion-resistant sleeving if necessary.
- 6Component replacement: If the pretensioner is faulty, replace the front passenger seat belt assembly (the pretensioner usually integrates with the seat belt retractor). Verify normal resistance before installing the new part. Do not measure the resistance of an installed pretensioner; this may trigger deployment.
- 7System verification: Restore all connections, turn on the power, clear the fault code, and perform the SRS system self-check (turn the key to ON and verify the warning light turns off after 6 seconds). Use the diagnostic tool to perform the 'Collision Output Check' function (Simulation Test) and verify B179C does not return.
- 8Final check: Refit the seat and interior trim, perform a road test, and check if the seat adjustment function affects the wiring harness. Return the vehicle after confirming no abnormalities.
Seat rail chafed wiring harness, causing intermittent short circuit
Corroded connector caused short circuit after water ingress
B-pillar wiring harness incorrectly fitted after accident repair
Internal short circuit in pretensioner body caused hard fault