DTC B173611 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control unit detects an abnormal short to body ground in the firing circuit of the right second-row side airbag module (typically located on the side of the right second-row seat or the lower B-pillar) — Atto 8
DTC B173611 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control unit detects an abnormal short to body ground in the firing circuit of the right second-row side airbag module (typically located on the side of the right second-row seat or the lower B-pillar).
The airbag module contains an electric squib (igniter) controlled by the airbag ECU, with a normal resistance between 1.5 and 2.5 Ω.
The diagnostic system logs a short to ground when the circuit-to-ground resistance drops below the threshold (typically under 1 Ω or a specific calibrated value).
This fault produces the following consequences: 1) The side airbag fails to deploy during a collision, resulting in a loss of side-impact protection; 2) In extreme cases, short-circuit current triggers unintended airbag deployment, causing occupant injury; 3) The SRS enters fail-safe mode, disabling the entire vehicle airbag system.
This constitutes a highest-severity electrical safety fault requiring immediate repair.
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