B1612

DTC B1612 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) detected an abnormally low-resistance connection between the front passenger frontal airbag igniter circuit and the vehicle power supply (B+), indicating a short to power — Atto 8

Safety System

DTC B1612 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) detected an abnormally low-resistance connection between the front passenger frontal airbag igniter circuit and the vehicle power supply (B+), indicating a short to power.

Under normal conditions, the airbag igniter circuit remains in a high-resistance state isolated from both power and ground (typically greater than 10kΩ).

The SRS ECU momentarily connects power through an internal switch only during airbag deployment.

A short to power means one or both sides of the igniter continuously connect to the 12V power supply.

This condition causes: (1) failure of the airbag to deploy during a collision (the ECU detects the circuit fault and inhibits triggering); (2) unintended airbag deployment in extreme cases due to abnormal current; (3) damage to the diagnostic driver circuit inside the SRS ECU.

This fault involves the connections between the front passenger airbag module, clock spring (spiral cable), floor wiring harness, and SRS ECU.

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Cases Logged
BYD DTC AI Analysis

BYD S7 rear wiper intermittent mode failure (B1612 related)

SYMPTOMS Rear wiper inoperative. Instrument cluster intermittently displays wiper system fault. Customer reports rear wiper either does not move when switched on, or does not work in intermittent mode. DIAGNOSIS 1. Scanned vehicle systems with VDS diagnostic tool. Retrieved DTC B1612 from Body Control Module (BCM): rear wiper mode select switch circuit open. 2. Inspected wiper switch assembly. Measured resistance of rear wiper mode select switch — poor internal contact found. 3. Checked wiring harness between rear wiper switch and BCM. Inspected connectors CJB01 and GJB01; no visible wire breaks. 4. Measured switch signal line voltage. Voltage abnormal with switch in intermittent position (should be 5V pulse; actual 0V). REPAIR Replaced combination switch assembly (wiper switch). Cleared DTCs and road tested. Rear wiper operates correctly in all modes; DTC has not returned.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI Analysis

BYD Song series rear wiper intermittent mode fault (DTC B1612)

Symptoms: The owner of a BYD Song (petrol variant) reported the rear wiper only worked continuously; intermittent mode was inoperative. The instrument cluster occasionally illuminated a warning light. Diagnosis: 1. Scanned with VDS: stored DTC B1612 (rear wiper mode select switch circuit open). 2. Removed the combination switch below the steering wheel. Inspection revealed oxidation on the internal reed of the rear wiper mode switch, causing poor contact. 3. Measured continuity between switch pins 3 and 4: open circuit in the intermittent position (normally closed). 4. Inspected the wiring harness – no damage found. BCM supply voltage normal at 12V. Resolution: Cleaned the internal contacts of the combination switch and applied conductive grease. Fault was temporarily cleared after reassembly. Advised the owner to monitor during use; if the fault recurs, replace the combination switch assembly.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI Analysis

BYD Tang DM rear wiper failure (B1612 related)

Symptoms: All-New Tang DM. Rear wiper completely inoperative, front wiper normal. Instrument panel displays "Check wiper system". Diagnosis: 1. Scanned with VDS2000 diagnostic tool; Body Control Module reported fault code B1612. 2. Checked rear wiper motor power supply (pin B16-1); voltage normal at 12V. 3. Checked rear wiper switch signal line (pin B16-2); no signal input detected. 4. Further inspection found dry solder joint on rear wiper mode select switch inside combination switch. Solution: Replaced combination switch assembly; fault resolved. Teardown analysis of old part confirmed dry solder joint on internal PCB caused signal interruption.
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.