DTC B1781 indicates the airbag system (SRS) detected an abnormal short to vehicle power (B+, typically 12V battery voltage) in the right middle-row seat belt pretensioner ignition circuit — Seal U
DTC B1781 indicates the airbag system (SRS) detected an abnormal short to vehicle power (B+, typically 12V battery voltage) in the right middle-row seat belt pretensioner ignition circuit.
The pretensioner is an electrically triggered ignition device containing an igniter and a gas generator.
Under normal conditions, the circuit remains in a high-resistance open state (showing a low resistance of 2-3Ω only when measured with a dedicated tool).
When the Airbag Control Unit (ACU) detects the circuit voltage continuously exceeding the threshold (typically above 5V) or an abnormal resistance drop, it identifies a short to power.
This fault forces the SRS into fail-safe mode, disabling the right middle-row and potentially related airbag functions.
The airbag warning light illuminates continuously.
In severe cases, the pretensioner may fail to deploy during a collision or may trigger unintentionally.
- 1Physical damage to the wiring harness: Continuous chafing of the wiring harness under the right middle-row seat, inside the B-pillar trim panel, or the floor wiring harness during seat track adjustment damages the insulation, causing the pretensioner power wire to short to a body power wire or constant power circuit.
- 2Connector fault: Water ingress, oxidation, bent pins, or backed-out pins in the under-seat pretensioner connector (usually located on the seat frame or B-pillar base) cause a short circuit between adjacent terminals (power and signal/ground).
- 3Pretensioner internal short circuit: Breakdown of internal components in the seat belt retractor assembly pretensioner igniter (such as a squib short circuit) causes resistance to drop abnormally to nearly 0Ω.
- 4SRS control unit (ACU) fault: A damaged ACU internal drive circuit or monitoring chip generates a false report (confirm only after ruling out the wiring harness and components).
- 5Aftermarket modifications: When installing seat heating, ventilation, or massage functions, technicians mistakenly connect the pretensioner wiring harness in parallel with the vehicle's constant power supply, or the seat rail crushes an improperly secured harness.
- 1Safety Preparation and Diagnostic Confirmation: Use the BYD dedicated diagnostic tool (VDS or ED400) to read the fault code. Confirm B1781 is a current fault (Active Code), not a history fault. Record freeze frame data. Disconnect the battery negative terminal and wait at least 3 minutes to fully discharge the SRS capacitor.
- 2Visual inspection and connector check: Remove the right middle-row seat (or lower B-pillar trim panel). Check the pretensioner connector (usually a yellow plug) for looseness, water ingress, corrosion, or physical damage. Check for bent, backed-out, or bridged pins. Clean the connector with compressed air and apply specified conductive grease.
- 3Circuit continuity and insulation test: Use a multimeter to measure the resistance between the pretensioner terminals (normal: 2.0-3.0Ω; <1.0Ω indicates an internal short circuit). Measure the resistance between the terminals and ground (must be >1MΩ). Measure the terminal voltage (must be <1V; 12V indicates a short to power). Use a probe to check harness continuity. Inspect the harness sheath near the seat track and B-pillar hinge.
- 4Wiring harness repair or component replacement: If the wiring harness is damaged, repair it using heat-shrink tubing or waterproof tape, and reroute the harness to prevent interference with seat mechanical components. If the pretensioner has a short circuit, replace the right second-row seat belt assembly (including the pretensioner). Do not repair the pretensioner separately. If the ACU is faulty, replace the airbag control unit and perform coding configuration.
- 5System reset and function verification: Reconnect all connectors and the battery, then clear the fault codes. Perform the SRS system self-test (ACU initialization). Perform a static test (simulate a crash signal to test circuit continuity without triggering the pretensioner). Verify the airbag warning light turns off within 6 seconds. Perform a road test. Read the live data stream using the diagnostic tool to verify the pretensioner circuit resistance and voltage are within the normal range.
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