DTC B162212 indicates abnormal continuity between the squib circuit of the driver side airbag (usually the seat-mounted side airbag) and the vehicle positive power supply (B+, battery voltage) — Qin Plus
DTC B162212 indicates abnormal continuity between the squib circuit of the driver side airbag (usually the seat-mounted side airbag) and the vehicle positive power supply (B+, battery voltage).
In the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control logic, the airbag squib circuit must maintain a high-impedance open state at rest.
The control unit determines circuit integrity by monitoring circuit voltage.
Detecting a short to power in this circuit indicates damaged wiring insulation contacting a constant power wire, or an insulation failure of the igniter coil inside the airbag module.
This fault immediately forces the SRS into fail-safe mode, which: 1) Disables the driver side airbag, preventing deployment during a side impact; 2) Illuminates the airbag warning lamp; 3) Creates a risk of unintended airbag deployment in extreme cases (despite multiple protections in modern systems).
Because it involves a core component of the passive safety system, this fault classifies as severe and requires immediate repair.
Seat adjustment chafed the wiring harness, causing a short circuit.
Connector corroded and shorted after wading
Wiring incorrectly connected after accident repair
Replaced airbag module due to internal short circuit