DTC B169416 indicates the airbag control unit (SRS ECU) detects an internal operating voltage below the calibrated threshold (typically below 9V), or a functional fault in the ECU internal power management module or voltage regulation circuit — Seal 6 EV
DTC B169416 indicates the airbag control unit (SRS ECU) detects an internal operating voltage below the calibrated threshold (typically below 9V), or a functional fault in the ECU internal power management module or voltage regulation circuit.
This hardware-level fault indicates the SRS ECU cannot maintain the stable operating voltage required for its internal microprocessor, acceleration sensor, and ignition circuit.
When triggered, the ECU enters fail-safe mode.
This condition can cause complete airbag system failure (airbags fail to deploy during a collision), prevent seat belt pretensioner activation, or generate a false alarm resulting in unintended airbag deployment.
This fault poses a severe safety risk and requires immediate repair.
- 1Damage to the SRS ECU internal power management chip or voltage regulation circuit prevents conversion of battery voltage into a stable 5V/3.3V internal operating voltage.
- 2A severely discharged vehicle battery, generator fault, or excessive voltage drop in the dedicated SRS power supply circuit causes the ECU input voltage to remain below 9V.
- 3Pin oxidation, terminal back-out, or poor contact at the SRS ECU connector (usually located under the center console), causing abnormally high resistance in the power supply circuit.
- 4Loose or corroded ECU ground harness (ground point G301 or G302) causing reference ground potential drift and abnormal voltage detection.
- 5After a vehicle collision, the SRS ECU internal crash sensor triggers fuse protection or a software lock (Crash Data Locked). Replace with a new module.
- 1Read the complete fault code stream using a BYD VDS2000 or Launch X431 diagnostic tool. Confirm B169416 is Active. Check for accompanying fault codes such as B1694-00 (power supply voltage too low) or U0151 (lost communication with SRS). Record the voltage value in the freeze frame data.
- 2Measure the battery static voltage (≥12.4V) and the charging voltage after startup (13.5–14.5V). Check the dashboard fuse box to verify the SRS ECU fuse (F1/15, usually 10A or 15A) is not blown. Measure the voltage between ECU connector pin 1 (constant power) and body ground.
- 3Disconnect the battery negative terminal and wait 3 minutes (capacitor discharge). Remove the center console side trim panels and remove the SRS ECU module (part number usually starts with 5A or 6A). Inspect the 32-pin connector for water ingress, green pin oxidation, or backed-out terminals. Measure the resistance between the power supply pin and the ground pin (should be <1Ω).
- 4If the circuit voltage is normal (12V±0.5V) and the ground is good, but the fault code fails to clear, diagnose an internal ECU fault and replace the SRS ECU assembly. (Note: The replacement ECU must match the vehicle configuration code. Do not mix ECUs from different airbag configuration versions.)
- 5After installing the new ECU, perform Online Programming, write the Vehicle Configuration parameters, and perform Zero Point Calibration for the crash sensor. Clear the fault codes, then perform a System Check to confirm the airbag warning lamp turns off and communication is normal.
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