DTC B160111 indicates a short to ground in the driver frontal airbag (DAB) igniter circuit — Seal U
DTC B160111 indicates a short to ground in the driver frontal airbag (DAB) igniter circuit.
The SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) airbag igniter utilizes a low-resistance circuit (typically 2.0–3.0Ω).
The ACU (Airbag Control Unit) registers a short to ground when it detects circuit resistance below the threshold (<0.8Ω) or direct continuity to body ground.
Wiring insulation failure or an internal component short circuit causes this fault, grounding the igniter circuit abnormally.
Effects include: 1) the airbag may fail to deploy during a collision (current bypasses to ground); 2) electrostatic discharge or electromagnetic interference may cause unintended deployment in extreme cases; 3) the system enters fail-safe mode, disabling all airbag functions.
This constitutes a Level 1 active safety system fault.
Remove the vehicle from service immediately; the driver airbag serves as the final line of defense, and its failure drastically increases the risk of injury or fatality during an accident.
- 1Wear and breakage of the flat cable inside the clock spring causes the wire core to contact the steering wheel metal frame and short to ground. This is a common fault on high-mileage BYD Qin/E Series vehicles; long-term lock-to-lock steering causes fatigue damage to the coiled cable.
- 2Water ingress and corrosion in the airbag wiring harness connector (usually located below the steering wheel or inside the steering column trim). A blocked A/C drain pipe or faulty front windshield seal allows water to enter, creating an electrolyte that shorts the pins to body ground.
- 3Tools scratching the wiring harness insulation during improper airbag removal or installation, or improper harness securing after accident repairs, causing a metal bracket edge to chafe the outer sheath and create a short to ground.
- 4Internal short circuit caused by insulation failure of the igniter bridge wire inside the airbag module (Inflator). Although relatively rare, this can occur in high-temperature, high-humidity environments or when using poor-quality reconditioned airbags.
- 5An ACU internal drive circuit fault or bent connector pins cause the diagnostic circuit to falsely detect a short to ground. Measure harness-side resistance and the ACU-side output waveform to isolate the cause.
- 1Safety preparation: Turn off the ignition switch, disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal, and wait at least 90 seconds to fully discharge the SRS capacitor and prevent accidental airbag deployment. Discharge static electricity from your body before disconnecting the airbag connector.
- 2Static visual inspection: Check the steering wheel area for signs of disassembly, water stains, mold odor, or exposed wiring harnesses. Specifically inspect the wiring harness sleeve below the steering column for damage. Check the airbag connector (yellow marking) for looseness or green copper corrosion.
- 3Resistance measurement: Set a multimeter to ohms, disconnect the airbag module connector, and individually measure the resistance of the DAB+ and DAB- circuits to body ground. The normal reading is infinite (OL). A low resistance reading of 0-5Ω confirms a short to ground.
- 4Clock spring isolation test: Remove the steering wheel using a special puller. Disconnect the upper and lower clock spring connectors. Measure the resistance to ground separately at the clock spring upstream (ACU side) and downstream (airbag side). If the upstream side is normal but the downstream side is shorted, replace the clock spring assembly.
- 5Harness circuit inspection: If the clock spring is normal, trace the main harness down the steering column and inspect the firewall pass-through grommet for wear. If necessary, gently move the harness with a probe and monitor the multimeter for resistance fluctuations to locate the short circuit.
- 6Component replacement and verification: After replacing the faulty component (clock spring, wiring harness, or airbag module), leave the airbag disconnected. Connect an airbag simulator (2.7Ω resistor) to the ACU connector, clear the fault code, and perform an ignition self-check to confirm normal system operation.
- 7Final assembly test: Remove the simulator, restore all connections, and reconnect the battery. Use VDS or X431 to perform an SRS system self-check. Confirm B160111 becomes a history code and no current codes exist. Perform a crash simulation test (specialized equipment required) to verify circuit resistance is within the standard range.
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