DTC B163B-00 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) ECU detects front passenger side airbag (typically seat side or curtain airbag) igniter circuit resistance below the calibrated threshold (normal range approximately 1 — Seal 6 EV
DTC B163B-00 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) ECU detects front passenger side airbag (typically seat side or curtain airbag) igniter circuit resistance below the calibrated threshold (normal range approximately 1.5-3.0 Ω; detected resistance <1.0 Ω or approaching 0 Ω).
This fault indicates a short circuit risk in the airbag igniter circuit, which can cause: 1) Airbag deployment failure during a collision, resulting in loss of occupant protection; 2) Unintended airbag deployment due to the short circuit in extreme cases.
The SRS enters fail-safe mode, illuminates the airbag warning light, and may disable the seat belt pretensioner function on some models.
- 1Airbag igniter internal short circuit: Damaged heating wire insulation inside the airbag module causes a short circuit between the positive and negative terminals, dropping resistance to nearly 0 Ω.
- 2Wiring harness wear and short circuit: Repeated bending of the front passenger seat side airbag wiring harness at the seat adjustment slide rail damages the insulation and causes a short circuit between wires.
- 3Connector water ingress and corrosion: Poor sealing of the airbag connector under the seat or lower B-pillar allows water ingress after wading, causing a short circuit between pins.
- 4Clock spring (spiral cable) internal short circuit: Interlayer short circuit in the internal flat cable of the clock spring under the steering wheel (e.g., if the side airbag connects through it).
- 5SRS ECU detection circuit fault: Internal ECU A/D converter or sampling resistor fault causes an abnormally low resistance reading.
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the low-voltage battery negative terminal, remove the high-voltage service disconnect switch (if applicable), and wait at least 90 seconds to allow the SRS capacitor to discharge fully. Do not measure the airbag inflator directly using a multimeter on the resistance setting.
- 2Visual inspection: Inspect the front passenger seat side airbag and B-pillar curtain airbag for damage. Inspect the yellow SRS connector under the seat for water ingress, corrosion, or looseness. Inspect the wiring harness for wear at the seat slide rail.
- 3Circuit isolation diagnosis: Disconnect the airbag module connector and connect the dedicated SRS diagnostic tool (or a 2Ω simulator resistor) in place of the airbag module. If the fault code changes to "open circuit", this confirms an internal short circuit in the airbag module. If the fault code remains "resistance too low", continue troubleshooting the wiring harness.
- 4Harness resistance measurement: Disconnect the SRS ECU connector and measure the resistance between the positive and negative terminals of the front passenger airbag circuit. The normal reading is infinity (open circuit). A low resistance value indicates a short circuit between the harness wires.
- 5Clock spring inspection (if applicable): If the fault involves the steering wheel airbag, remove the clock spring and measure its internal resistance. Normal resistance is <1Ω. Replace if abnormal.
- 6Component replacement: Replace the faulty airbag module, wiring harness, or clock spring. All SRS connectors must lock with an audible 'click'. Do not repair the SRS wiring harness; replace the entire harness.
- 7System verification: Restore all connections, clear fault codes, and perform the SRS system self-check (turn ignition ON and observe the warning lamp; it should illuminate for 6 seconds and then turn off). Verify the oscilloscope waveform (if available).
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