DTC B1632 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) ECU detected a short to power (B+) in the front passenger side airbag igniter circuit (typically the right seat airbag or side curtain airbag) — Seal 6 EV
DTC B1632 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) ECU detected a short to power (B+) in the front passenger side airbag igniter circuit (typically the right seat airbag or side curtain airbag).
Normally, the airbag igniter circuit maintains a low voltage (near 0V).
The ECU supplies high current only when triggering airbag deployment.
If the ECU continuously detects circuit voltage near battery voltage (12V), it identifies a short to power.
This fault forces the SRS into fail-safe mode, disables front passenger side airbag deployment, and illuminates the airbag warning light.
Potential causes include damaged wiring insulation, shorted connector terminals, an internal short in the airbag module, or a faulty internal ECU driver circuit.
- 1Wiring harness wear under the seat or inside the B-pillar: Frequent front passenger seat adjustment or door operation causes the wiring harness to rub against metal body edges. This friction damages the insulation and causes a short circuit to the power wire.
- 2Connector water ingress or deformed terminals: During vehicle wading, car washing, or due to a blocked sunroof drain hose, water enters the front passenger-side airbag connector (usually located under the seat or inside the B-pillar trim), causing a short circuit between terminals.
- 3Airbag assembly internal fault: Igniter insulation aging and breakdown inside the front passenger side airbag (curtain or seat airbag) causes the igniter pins to short to ground or power.
- 4SRS ECU internal drive circuit fault: A damaged ECU internal monitoring circuit or ignition drive transistor falsely reports a short circuit fault, or an actual short circuit exists in the internal circuit.
- 5Unauthorized modification or accessory installation: Mistakenly using the airbag wiring harness as a ground or constant power wire when installing aftermarket seat heating, ventilation, or electronic anti-theft equipment, causing abnormal voltage in the circuit.
- 1Safety Preparation: Set the vehicle to OFF, disconnect the low-voltage battery negative terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds for the SRS capacitor to fully discharge to prevent accidental airbag deployment.
- 2Fault Confirmation and Freeze Frame Analysis: Connect the diagnostic tool to read DTC B1632, record freeze frame data (vehicle speed, temperature, voltage, etc., at the time of occurrence), and confirm whether the fault is current or historical.
- 3Visual inspection: Remove the front passenger seat (seat airbag) or lower B-pillar trim panel (curtain airbag). Check the airbag connector for looseness, water ingress, corrosion, or obvious burn marks. Check the wiring harness for wear, crushing, or damaged insulation.
- 4Circuit resistance and voltage measurement: Disconnect the airbag module connector. Use a multimeter to measure the voltage from the harness-side terminals to ground (should be <1V) and to power (should be <1V). Measure the resistance between the terminals (should be >1MΩ). A measured voltage close to 12V indicates a short to power in the circuit.
- 5Harness continuity and insulation test: Use a multimeter on the continuity setting to measure wiring continuity between the airbag connector and the SRS ECU. Use a megohmmeter to measure insulation resistance between the wiring and the vehicle body (should be >10MΩ). Focus inspection on the harness near the seat slide rails and door hinges.
- 6Airbag module test: Measure the airbag module igniter resistance (normal value is 2.0–3.0 Ω, varies slightly by model). If the resistance is 0 Ω or infinite, or shows a short to the housing, replace the airbag module.
- 7SRS ECU inspection: If the wiring and airbag module are normal but the fault code persists, check the ECU connector and pins. If necessary, perform a substitution test with a known-good ECU.
- 8Repair and Verification: Repair or replace the damaged wiring harness, connector, airbag assembly, or ECU. Reconnect all components. Connect the battery. Clear the fault code. Perform the SRS system self-check (turn the ignition switch ON; the warning light should illuminate for 6 seconds and then turn off). Perform a road test to verify.
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