This DTC indicates the airbag control unit (SRS ECU) detects the left rear seat belt pretensioner igniter resistance exceeds the calibrated threshold (normal range is typically 1 — Seal U
This DTC indicates the airbag control unit (SRS ECU) detects the left rear seat belt pretensioner igniter resistance exceeds the calibrated threshold (normal range is typically 1.6-2.4Ω; the DTC triggers when detected resistance is >3.0Ω or an open circuit occurs).
As a key actuator in the passive safety system, the pretensioner uses the igniter to detonate the gas generator during a collision, instantly tightening the seat belt to eliminate slack between the belt and the occupant.
Excessive resistance indicates high impedance or a potential open circuit in the igniter circuit.
This condition can prevent pretensioner deployment during a collision, severely compromising occupant restraint protection.
This is a hard DTC.
While the fault remains active, the system triggers a continuous warning and illuminates the airbag warning lamp.
Some models may also limit power output or disable specific assistance functions.
- 1Poor pretensioner connector contact: Vibration, oxidation, or a loose connection increases contact resistance at the left rear pretensioner plug (usually located inside the C-pillar trim or under the seat). This is the most common cause, especially after wading or exposure to damp conditions.
- 2Mechanical damage to the wiring harness under the seat: On foldable rear seats, frequent folding can break internal copper wires or damage insulation at the bend of the pretensioner harness (usually yellow), causing high resistance or an intermittent open circuit.
- 3Pretensioner unit aging: Oxidation of the igniter internal bridge wire or moisture ingress into the pyrotechnic charge causes resistance to drift outside the normal range over time, typically in vehicles over 5 years old or those exposed to high-temperature, high-humidity environments.
- 4Open circuit in the wiring harness from the SRS ECU to the pretensioner: Wear, rodent damage, or improper accident repair caused a partial break in the body wiring harness within the B-pillar or floor cable duct, but did not completely sever it.
- 5Airbag control unit internal fault: A fault in the SRS ECU internal sampling circuit or analog-to-digital converter causes a false high resistance reading. Probability is low. Rule out external wiring before confirming.
- 1Safety preparation: Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal and wait at least 90 seconds (or wait for the capacitors to discharge as specified in the repair manual). Ensure the SRS system completely powers down to prevent accidental pretensioner deployment during inspection.
- 2Locate the pretensioner: Remove the left rear seat and lower C-pillar trim panel. Find the left rear seat belt pretensioner assembly (usually integrated with the seat belt retractor) and identify the dedicated yellow wiring harness connector.
- 3Visual inspection: Verify the pretensioner connector is fully inserted and the locking tab is engaged. Inspect the connector pins for green oxidation, burning, or backed-out terminals. Check the wiring harness at the seat folding mechanism for wear marks.
- 4Resistance measurement: Use a dedicated SRS system diagnostic ohmmeter (or a digital multimeter with a test current <1mA) to measure the resistance across the pretensioner terminals. Normal resistance is 1.6-2.4Ω. If resistance is >3.0Ω, disconnect the connector and measure the pretensioner body and wiring harness side separately: if the body resistance is abnormal, replace the pretensioner; if the wiring harness side resistance is infinite, check circuit continuity.
- 5Harness continuity test: Measure harness continuity from the SRS ECU connector to the pretensioner connector. Standard resistance must be <1Ω. Also measure insulation resistance to ground. Resistance must be >1MΩ. Focus inspection on the harness bend points under the seat and the C-pillar pass-through hole.
- 6Substitution check: Connect a dedicated 3Ω simulation resistor (or a known-good pretensioner) to the circuit. Clear the fault code and check if the fault returns to rule out a false ECU fault.
- 7Repair/Replace: Based on measurement results, repair the wiring harness (soldering + heat-shrink tubing + corrugated conduit protection) or replace the pretensioner assembly (Note: Record the old part number when replacing the pretensioner. After installing the new part, fully lock the connector and apply conductive grease to prevent oxidation).
- 8System reset: Reconnect all connectors and the battery. Clear the fault code using the diagnostic tool. Perform the SRS system self-check. Confirm B176C-00 does not return. Verify the airbag warning light turns off. Finally, perform a road test to verify.
Wear on the left rear seat folding mechanism caused the wiring harness to break internally.
C-pillar connector oxidation causing increased contact resistance
Pretensioner unit resistance drift due to aging
Wiring harness connector not fully locked after accident repair
SRS ECU internal sampling circuit false positive