B161A1A

DTC B161A1A indicates the Supplemental Restraint System (SRS) detects the front passenger airbag (PAB) ignition circuit resistance is 0 ohms or below the threshold (usually <0 — Seal 6 EV

Safety System

DTC B161A1A indicates the Supplemental Restraint System (SRS) detects the front passenger airbag (PAB) ignition circuit resistance is 0 ohms or below the threshold (usually <0.8Ω).

The SRS ECU monitors circuit integrity using a constant current source to measure the squib circuit resistance.

Normal resistance is 1.5-3.5Ω (typical value 2.0-2.8Ω).

A resistance of 0 indicates a short circuit.

Possible causes include an internal short in the airbag module squib, an internal short in the clock spring, a wiring harness short to ground or power, or a faulty internal sampling circuit in the SRS ECU.

This fault prevents the front passenger airbag from deploying during a collision (fail-safe mode) or causes unintentional deployment (extremely rare but dangerous).

The system illuminates the airbag warning light and disables the front passenger airbag.

5
Cases Logged
5
Causes
  • 1Front passenger airbag module internal igniter short circuit: Internal airbag bridge wire short circuit or damp propellant causing conduction between terminals.
  • 2Clock spring (spiral cable) internal short circuit: Damaged spiral cable winding beneath the steering wheel, or broken internal ribbon cable shorting to ground or between circuits.
  • 3Physical damage to the wiring harness: Sharp edges cut or crush the dashboard wiring harness, causing a short circuit to body ground or the 12V power line.
  • 4Connector fault: Airbag connector (usually yellow) has bent terminals, backed-out pins, corrosion from water ingress, or metallic debris causing a short circuit between terminals.
  • 5Internal SRS ECU fault: Damaged A/D converter in the airbag control unit internal sampling circuit, or shorted driver chip.
  • 1
    Safety preparation: Turn off the ignition, disconnect the negative battery terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment.
  • 2
    Fault confirmation: Connect the diagnostic tool and read the freeze frame data. Confirm the fault is current (Current) rather than a history fault, and record the environmental data at the time the fault occurred.
  • 3
    Visual inspection: Check the front passenger airbag module connector (usually on the right side of the dashboard or behind the glove box) for oxidation, water ingress, or bent pins. Check the clock spring connector.
  • 4
    Isolation diagnosis: Disconnect the front passenger airbag module connector and use a multimeter to measure the resistance between the pins on the airbag module side. If the resistance is 0Ω, replace the airbag module. If the resistance is within the normal range (2-3Ω), the fault is in the wiring harness or ECU.
  • 5
    Harness continuity check: Disconnect the SRS ECU connector and measure the harness between the ECU and the airbag connector. Check for short to ground (resistance between pin and vehicle body), short to power (resistance between pin and 12V), and short between wires (resistance between high-side and low-side pins).
  • 6
    Clock spring inspection (if applicable): For circuits integrated in the clock spring, measure the resistance between the clock spring input and output terminals. The resistance must remain stable when turning the steering wheel. Replace the clock spring if the reading is 0Ω or fluctuates.
  • 7
    ECU verification: If the wiring harness and airbag module are normal, measure the output at the corresponding SRS ECU pin. If the output still indicates a short circuit, replace the SRS ECU and perform coding.
  • 8
    Repair and Verification: After repairing or replacing the faulty component, reconnect all connectors and restore power. Use the diagnostic tool to clear the fault code and perform the 'Deployment Control Unit Check' or 'Crash Output Check' function. Verify the current fault changes to 'Normal' and the fault warning lamp turns off.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

BYD Qin EV: Passenger airbag connector short-circuited due to water ingress

After driving through water, the instrument panel airbag warning light stayed on. Retrieved DTC B161A1A. Inspection found the passenger airbag connector (behind the glovebox) had a deteriorated seal. Water inside caused a short between the terminals, measuring 0.3 Ω. Disassembled the connector, cleaned and dried it, applied conductive anti-corrosion compound, and replaced it with an improved waterproof connector. Resistance returned to 2.4 Ω, resolving the fault.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Internal short circuit in BYD E3 clock spring caused zero resistance.

The customer reported a noise when turning the steering wheel, after which the airbag warning light came on. The scan tool showed code B161A1A. After disconnecting the passenger airbag module, the module itself tested normal, but the harness side still measured as short-circuited. Further inspection of the clock spring (spiral cable) found that the internal flexible ribbon cable had broken and grounded out, creating a short to ground in the circuit. Replacing the clock spring assembly resolved the fault.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

BYD E2 dashboard wiring harness chafed, short to earth

After driving on rough roads, the airbag warning light illuminated intermittently. Freeze frame data showed DTC B161A1A. Inspection found a sharp edge on the right side of the instrument panel bracket. The passenger airbag wiring harness (yellow) had chafed against this edge, damaging the insulation and causing the copper wires to short to ground on the metal bracket. Repaired the harness (re-wrapped), fitted a rubber protective sleeve to the bracket edge, and rerouted the wiring to prevent further contact.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

BYD Qin EV SRS ECU sampling circuit fault

After replacing the front windscreen (involving dashboard removal and refitting), DTC B161A1A appeared. Measured passenger airbag module resistance: 2.6 Ω (normal). Harness continuity ok, no shorts to earth or power. Suspected internal SRS ECU fault. Tried replacing with a same-model ECU (requires syncing VIN and coding data). Fault code cleared and hasn't returned. The original ECU had a damaged internal driver chip that falsely reported a short circuit.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

BYD E3 front passenger airbag module internal igniter short circuit

Replaced the passenger airbag after the accident. After installation, DTC B161A1A set. Disconnected the airbag connector and measured resistance across the new airbag module pins at 0.8 Ω (below normal). Determined a part quality issue (internal bridge wire short circuit or manufacturing defect). Installed a genuine OEM airbag module; measured resistance at 2.2 Ω, and the system self‑test passed.
Data confidence: Official This information is for reference only. Always consult a qualified technician for diagnosis and repair. Do not attempt high-voltage system repairs yourself. Sources: [1]