DTC B1622-00 indicates the driver side airbag squib circuit is shorted to the vehicle constant power supply (+B, battery voltage) — Seal 6 EV
DTC B1622-00 indicates the driver side airbag squib circuit is shorted to the vehicle constant power supply (+B, battery voltage).
The SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) ECU continuously monitors the airbag igniter circuit resistance and voltage.
When detecting an abnormally high voltage on the igniter wiring (approaching the 12V supply voltage), the ECU registers a short to power.
This fault is extremely dangerous and may cause: 1) accidental airbag deployment while driving, resulting in serious personal injury; 2) failure of the airbag to deploy during a collision due to the circuit fault; 3) the SRS entering fail-safe mode, disabling all airbag functions.
This is a hard fault (Hard DTC).
Once confirmed, the system triggers a severe warning and prohibits further vehicle operation.
- 1Worn under-seat wiring harness: Friction from repeated forward and backward seat movement damages the insulation of the driver's side airbag wiring harness (typically routed near the seat slide rail). This causes a short circuit upon contact with power wires (such as seat heating or power adjustment supply wires).
- 2Airbag connector fault: A poorly sealed yellow dedicated airbag connector (CPA connector) under the seat allows water ingress or corrosion, causing a short circuit between pins; or failing to fully lock the connector after repairs causes terminals to misalign and contact the power terminal.
- 3Internal short circuit in the spiral cable (clock spring): Damaged insulation on the internal ribbon cable of the spiral cable beneath the steering wheel shorts the airbag igniter wire to other power supply circuits.
- 4Improper modification or repair: When installing aftermarket equipment such as seat ventilation/heating or dash cams, the technician mistakenly connected the power wire to the airbag circuit or damaged the wiring harness while drilling.
- 5SRS ECU internal drive circuit fault: The ignition drive chip inside the control unit breaks down, causing a false short-to-power fault (relatively rare; confirm after ruling out wiring faults).
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the battery negative terminal, wait at least 90 seconds for the SRS capacitor to fully discharge, and hang a 'Do Not Operate' warning tag on the steering wheel and seat.
- 2Initial visual inspection: Check the driver side airbag module connector (located on the side or under the seat, with yellow markings) and the clock spring connector for obvious burn marks, water ingress, or physical damage.
- 3Circuit isolation: Disconnect the SRS ECU connector and use a multimeter to measure the resistance between the driver side airbag ignition circuit terminal and power. Standard resistance is infinity. Continuity confirms a short circuit.
- 4Section-by-section inspection: Open the corrugated conduit section by section along the airbag wiring harness routing (from the SRS ECU → floor wiring harness → under the seat → airbag module). Inspect the seat slide rail friction areas and wiring harness retaining clips for wear and exposed copper.
- 5Swap test (if applicable): If the vehicle model supports this, after confirming the wiring has no short circuits, temporarily swap the driver-side and front passenger-side airbag wiring harnesses and read the fault codes. If the fault code changes to B1623-00 (passenger side short circuit), this indicates an internal short circuit in the airbag module.
- 6Repair and replacement: Repair the damaged wiring harness (use heat shrink tubing or replace the entire harness). Replace the damaged connector or airbag module (replace the module if internally shorted; do not repair).
- 7System verification: Connect the battery. Use the BYD EDT or VDS diagnostic tool to clear the fault code. Perform an SRS system self-check. Verify B1622-00 does not return and the airbag warning light turns off.
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