B1789

On BYD vehicles, DTC B1789 indicates a circuit fault in the driver seat belt pretensioner or the seat belt buckle position sensor, specifically a short to ground, open circuit, or signal range/performance fault — Seal U

Safety System

On BYD vehicles, DTC B1789 indicates a circuit fault in the driver seat belt pretensioner or the seat belt buckle position sensor, specifically a short to ground, open circuit, or signal range/performance fault.

Although early documentation may describe this as a 'second-stage front airbag', the fault code points to the seat belt restraint system components beneath the seat.

The SRS control module triggers B1789 when it detects abnormal resistance in the driver-side seat belt pretensioner circuit (below 1.0Ω or above 4.0Ω; normal range is 2.0-3.0Ω) or when the buckle position sensor signal voltage remains below the threshold.

This fault forces the airbag system into fail-safe mode.

In a collision, the system may fail to accurately determine if the driver is wearing the seat belt, preventing intended airbag deployment, disabling the pretensioner, or triggering start inhibition logic on certain models.

The fault also illuminates the instrument cluster SRS warning light continuously, indicating a substantial risk to the occupant protection system.

5
Cases Logged
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Song MAX seat rail pinched seatbelt pretensioner wiring harness

A 2019 BYD Song MAX suddenly displayed "Please check SRS system" on the dashboard while driving. VDS retrieved DTC B1789. Technicians moved the seat fully rearward and found the seat rail interfering with the seatbelt pretensioner wiring harness. The rail had crushed through the insulation and partially broken the copper wires, causing an intermittent open circuit. They soldered the break, applied insulation and waterproofing, rerouted the harness, and secured it to the seat frame with cable ties away from the rail. Clearing the fault codes resolved the issue.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Qin Plus DM-i seat belt pretensioner connector loose and oxidised

A Qin Plus DM-i had the airbag warning light on and chiming after a cold start. VDS detected DTC B1789. Found the yellow connector under the driver's seat not fully locked (knocked loose during previous interior cleaning) with minor oxidation on the internal pins. Repair: Disconnected the battery, unplugged the connector, and cleaned the pins with electronic contact cleaner. Reseated it firmly and secured it with a cable tie. Cleared the fault code. System returned to normal.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Unreplaced pretensioner caused open circuit after S6 accident repair

After a left-front collision repair, a BYD S6 displayed an SRS warning. DTC B1789 would not clear. The driver seatbelt pretensioner measured open circuit (infinite resistance). Disassembly revealed the pretensioner had deployed in the accident (gas generator exploded), but the initial repair only replaced body panels, not the seatbelt assembly. Fix: Replaced the driver seatbelt assembly (including pretensioner and anchorage position sensor), performed 'SRS configuration write' and 'sensor calibration' with a diagnostic tool. Fault resolved.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI Analysis

F3: Anchor position sensor connector unplugged after seat removal and refitting.

A BYD F3 owner removed the driver's seat to install seat covers. After reinstalling it, the airbag warning light stayed on. The scanner showed DTC B1789. Inspection found the seat belt anchor position sensor connector under the seat had been left unplugged; the system detected an open circuit. Repair: Reconnected the sensor connector until it clicked, cleared the DTC, and the system returned to normal.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Han EV intermittent B1789 wiring harness chafing on rough roads

A Han EV intermittently showed an SRS warning on rough roads, sometimes clearing after a restart. History stored DTC B1789 (intermittent). Inspection revealed a broken under-seat wiring harness retainer clip; the harness was rubbing against a metal body bracket, causing an intermittent short to ground. Repaired the harness by re-wrapping with insulation tape, replaced the retainer clip to ensure safe clearance, and applied conductive grease at the connector to prevent oxidation. The fault has not returned.
Original source ↗
Data confidence: Community This information is for reference only. Always consult a qualified technician for diagnosis and repair. Do not attempt high-voltage system repairs yourself.