This fault code indicates the measured resistance of the left rear side airbag (Side Airbag, Left Rear) firing circuit is 0 ohms, confirming a short circuit — Seal 6 EV
This fault code indicates the measured resistance of the left rear side airbag (Side Airbag, Left Rear) firing circuit is 0 ohms, confirming a short circuit.
In the BYD SRS (Supplemental Restraint System), normal airbag squib resistance ranges from 1.5 to 3.5 ohms.
A 0-ohm reading indicates a direct short circuit between the firing circuit power wire (Squib+) and ground wire (Squib-), or the airbag module detects abnormally low internal resistance.
This condition causes the SRS control unit to identify an unintended deployment risk, illuminate the airbag warning light, and disable the left rear side airbag.
Unlike a "resistance too high/open circuit" fault (infinite resistance), damaged wiring insulation, connector water ingress, or mechanical damage typically causes short circuits.
Inspect the circuit immediately to prevent potential overheating.
- 1Water ingress, moisture, or oxidation at the left rear seat side airbag connector (usually located under the seat or inside the C-pillar trim), causing a short circuit between the metal terminals.
- 2The rear seat adjustment mechanism, seat belt mechanism, or a foreign object chafed the airbag wiring harness under the seat or inside the B/C-pillar trim panel, damaging the insulation and causing the positive and negative wire cores to contact and short circuit.
- 3Internal short circuit in the wiring harness caused by rear passengers stepping on the seat side, heavy objects compressing the seat, or retaining clips piercing the harness during seat modifications (leather retrimming or installing seat covers).
- 4Internal short circuit in the left rear side airbag module igniter coil (very rare; usually exhibits characteristic airbag internal short-circuit resistance)
- 5SRS control unit (ACU) internal detection circuit fault or bent connector pin causing a short circuit, resulting in a false 0 Ω resistance reading.
- 1Use the BYD VDS2000/2100 diagnostic tool to read the fault code, confirm B174A-00 is 'Active', and record the voltage and ambient temperature from the freeze frame data.
- 2Perform safety procedure: turn off the ignition switch, disconnect the negative battery terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds (to fully discharge the SRS capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment).
- 3Remove the left rear seat assembly (typically requires removing 4 retaining bolts and lifting the seat) and locate the side airbag module connector (yellow connector with a short-circuit protection tab).
- 4Disconnect the airbag connector. Use a digital multimeter (minimum 10 MΩ input impedance) to measure the resistance between the two terminals of the airbag assembly. Normal resistance is 1.5-3.5 Ω. If the reading is 0-0.5 Ω, replace the airbag. If the reading is normal, the fault is in the wiring harness.
- 5Measure the wiring harness side: Measure the resistance from each connector terminal to body ground (should be infinite) and the resistance between the two terminals (should be infinite). Continuity indicates a short circuit.
- 6Carefully inspect the airbag wiring harness outer sheath along the harness routing (usually along the seat rail, lower B-pillar trim panel, and floor harness channel). Focus on interference points at the seat adjustment mechanism and harness retaining clips. Repair any damaged areas using heat-shrink tubing or replace the harness section.
- 7Check the inside of the connector for metal debris, liquid, or deformed terminals. Clean with electrical contact cleaner and verify shorting bar functionality.
- 8Restore all connections, reconnect the battery, and clear the fault code. Perform the 'ignition cycle test' (ON-OFF 3 times) and the 'SRS system self-test'. Confirm the fault code does not return and verify the instrument cluster airbag warning light turns off.
Water ingress under the left rear seat caused the connector to short-circuit.
Aftermarket genuine leather seats pierced airbag wiring harness.
Worn wiring harness at rear seat folding mechanism
Loose connector; metal debris caused short circuit