B175C

DTC B175C indicates the airbag control unit (SRS ECU) detects that the igniter (squib) resistance for the right rear side airbag (typically located in the right rear seat backrest side or C-pillar area) exceeds the upper normal threshold — Seal 6 EV

Safety System

DTC B175C indicates the airbag control unit (SRS ECU) detects that the igniter (squib) resistance for the right rear side airbag (typically located in the right rear seat backrest side or C-pillar area) exceeds the upper normal threshold.

The SRS system continuously monitors each airbag igniter's resistance via a low-current circuit; the normal range is typically 1.5-3.0 ohms.

If the resistance remains above approximately 3.5-4.5 ohms (specific thresholds vary by model), the system flags a 'resistance too high' condition.

This fault indicates a high-resistance state in the airbag circuit.

Possible causes include poor connector contact, a partially broken wiring harness, igniter degradation, or a faulty ECU internal sampling circuit.

Safety Impact: Insufficient current may prevent this airbag from deploying during a collision, or the system may trigger a safety strategy disabling the entire airbag system, degrading occupant protection.

3
Cases Logged
5
Causes
  • 1Loose right rear side airbag connector, oxidation from water ingress, or terminal back-out (commonly affects connectors under the seat or inside the C-pillar trim panel, where frequent seat adjustment or damp environments increase contact resistance)
  • 2Internal aging or a partial open circuit in the airbag inflator causes an abnormal increase in internal resistance (most common in older vehicles or vehicles exposed to high temperatures).
  • 3Worn wiring harness or broken strands. Long-term bending and friction cause partial breakage of the copper strands in the under-seat wiring harness, reducing the effective conductive cross-sectional area (the seat wiring harness sleeve design on some BYD models presents a wear risk).
  • 4Internal detection circuit fault in the SRS control unit, such as a faulty sampling resistor or A/D converter, causing a false high resistance reading.
  • 5Wiring harness damaged during modifications or repairs, such as accidental damage to the airbag harness when installing seat covers or modifying the audio system, or improper repairs following a collision.
  • 1
    Use the VDS diagnostic tool to read the DTC freeze frame data, confirm the environmental conditions (temperature, voltage) at the time of the fault, and check for stored history DTCs or related DTCs (such as sub-code B175C-00).
  • 2
    Perform the safe power-down procedure: disconnect the battery negative terminal and wait at least 3 minutes for the SRS capacitor to fully discharge to prevent accidental airbag deployment.
  • 3
    Locate the right rear side airbag module (Yuan/Song MAX: usually on the outer side of the right rear seat backrest; Tang/Qin: may be on the side of the C-pillar). Remove the relevant interior trim panels to expose the connector.
  • 4
    Visually inspect the connector for looseness, water ingress, oxidation, or deformed terminals. Measure the igniter circuit resistance using a dedicated airbag tester (or an equivalent alternative method specified in the repair manual). Never measure directly with a multimeter ohmmeter setting, as this may deploy the airbag.
  • 5
    Check wiring harness continuity. Inspect the wires inside the protective sleeve under the seat for wear or broken strands. Use a multimeter to measure the wiring harness end-to-end resistance. End-to-end resistance must be less than 1 ohm. Insulation resistance must be greater than 1 MΩ.
  • 6
    If measurement confirms abnormal resistance, replace the right rear side airbag assembly (including the igniter) or repair the wiring harness fault. If the wiring harness is normal but resistance remains high, replace the SRS control unit.
  • 7
    Reconnect all components, restore power, use VDS to clear the fault code, and run the 'SRS System Self-check' or 'Crash Detection Sensor Calibration' procedure. Confirm B175C does not return and the airbag warning light turns off.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Oxidized connector under right rear seat of Song MAX caused high resistance.

A 2019 Song MAX with 42,000 km illuminated the airbag warning light. Retrieved DTC B175C. Removed the right rear seat and found obvious oxidation inside the yellow side airbag wiring harness connector. Terminal surface oxidation increased contact resistance to 5.2 ohms. Cleaned the terminals with electronic contact cleaner, applied conductive grease, and reconnected the connector. Resistance measured 2.1 ohms. Cleared the DTC; fault resolved. A rear passenger spilled a drink that seeped into the connector, causing the oxidation.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

BYD Tang DM: Frequent seat adjustment caused internal wiring harness wire strands to break

2021 BYD Tang DM. Right rear side airbag intermittently setting DTC B175C. The side airbag igniter wiring harness routes through the seat frame on this model. Frequent forward/backward adjustment of the right rear seat (this owner uses it for child safety seat installation) broke the internal copper strands at the bend point while the outer sheath remained intact. Resistance measured intermittent, fluctuating between 3–8 ohms. Replaced the harness assembly, rerouted to add slack, and fitted an abrasion protection sleeve. Fault resolved.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

BYD Yuan EV Airbag Igniter Body Replacement Case – Aging

2019 BYD Yuan EV. B175C appeared after 5 years and could not be cleared. With the harness disconnected, resistance from the SRS ECU to the airbag measured normal at 0.3 ohms. Direct measurement across the airbag assembly terminals showed 4.8 ohms, outside the 1.5–3.0 ohm range. Fault: internal igniter degradation. Replaced the right rear side airbag assembly; resistance returned to 2.3 ohms and the system self-test passed. On older vehicles, replace the airbag assembly directly.
Data confidence: Official This information is for reference only. Always consult a qualified technician for diagnosis and repair. Do not attempt high-voltage system repairs yourself.