B1601

DTC B1601 indicates a short to ground in the driver frontal airbag (DAB) ignition circuit — Seal 6 EV

Safety System

DTC B1601 indicates a short to ground in the driver frontal airbag (DAB) ignition circuit.

In the BYD SRS (Supplemental Restraint System), this fault means damaged wire insulation in the circuit between the airbag control unit (ACU) and the driver airbag contacts the vehicle body ground, or an internal short to ground exists within the airbag inflator.

This causes circuit resistance to drop well below the standard range (normally 2.0-3.0 Ω, approaching 0 Ω during a short circuit).

When the ACU detects this abnormal drop in circuit impedance, it identifies a short-to-ground fault and triggers protection mode: the instrument cluster SRS warning light illuminates continuously, the system disables the driver airbag to prevent inadvertent deployment, and the airbag fails to deploy during a collision, severely compromising occupant safety.

3
Cases Logged
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Internal wear of the clock spring caused a short to ground.

A 2020 BYD Song Pro with 42,000 km on the odometer came in with the airbag warning light constantly illuminated. A VDS scan revealed current fault code B1601 (driver frontal airbag short to ground). The technician disconnected the battery negative terminal, waited 90 seconds, then removed the driver airbag. The airbag itself measured 2.3Ω (normal), and its terminal-to-ground resistance was infinite (normal). Next, the technician checked the clock spring. Measurements were normal with the steering wheel straight ahead, but when turned to full left or right lock, the downstream clock spring terminals intermittently showed 0Ω to ground. This confirmed internal wear of the ribbon cable causing a short to ground. The technician replaced the clock spring (Part No.: BYD-EG-5910XXX), reinstalled the steering wheel ensuring it was centered, cleared the fault codes, and the SRS system passed its self-test; the warning light went out. A road test confirmed the repair.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Connector corrosion after wading caused short to ground

A 2019 BYD Yuan EV had the airbag warning light illuminate after driving through heavy rain and flood water. The scan tool showed current fault code B1601. Inspection revealed water stains and verdigris corrosion inside the yellow airbag harness connector (C202 plug) below the steering wheel. One terminal had corroded and broken off, contacting the connector's metal housing and creating a short to ground. The resistance from that terminal to ground measured 0.2Ω. Repair steps: cleaned the connector thoroughly with electronic cleaner, dried the harness with compressed air, replaced the damaged terminal and re-crimped it, applied conductive anti-corrosion compound, and reconnected the plug. Also checked the floor harness sealing and found that the aged weatherstrip at the base of the A-pillar was allowing water entry; the technician resealed the area with fresh sealant. After clearing the fault codes and road testing, the fault did not recur.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Internal short circuit in airbag assembly after accident repair

A 2021 BYD Qin Plus DM-i was in a front collision. A repair shop replaced the driver airbag with a used unit. After the repair, the SRS warning light stayed on, and a scan tool read DTC B1601. The technician disconnected the battery, removed the airbag, and measured 2.1 Ω across its terminals — a reading that seemed normal. However, when measuring resistance from each terminal of the airbag connector to body earth, one terminal showed 0 Ω, confirming a short-to-earth fault in the used airbag's internal igniter. The technician replaced the driver airbag with a new genuine assembly. (Note: verify the part number matches the vehicle; some models also require replacing the seatbelt pretensioners.) After installation, the circuit resistance returned to normal (2.5 Ω). The technician connected the scan tool, cleared the DTC, and performed SRS system configuration and self-test. Fault resolved.
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.