B160212

DTC B160212 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control unit detects an abnormal short circuit between the driver’s front airbag inflator circuit and the vehicle power supply (12V+B) — Seal 6 EV

Safety System

DTC B160212 indicates the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) control unit detects an abnormal short circuit between the driver’s front airbag inflator circuit and the vehicle power supply (12V+B).

The inflator circuit normally maintains a high-resistance state (typically 2-3Ω, determined by the inflator internal resistance).

The control unit continuously monitors circuit voltage and resistance via an internal bridge detection circuit.

A short circuit to power indicates the voltage at one or both ends of the circuit continuously exceeds the threshold (typically above 5V) and the resistance is abnormally low.

This fault triggers the safety protection mechanism.

The system immediately enters fail-safe mode and disables the airbag deployment function to prevent accidental deployment caused by short-circuit current.

Hardware faults such as an internal clock spring short circuit, damaged wiring harness insulation contacting a power wire, or a driver transistor breakdown inside the SRS ECU may accompany this fault.

4
Cases Logged
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Internal short circuit in the clock spring caused DTC B160212 on the Qin Pro DM

A 2019 Qin Pro DM with 30,000 km displayed "Check SRS System" on the instrument panel. The scan tool retrieved active fault code B160212. Disassembly found the clock spring's internal flat cable had insulation damage at the third turn, contacting the adjacent horn power wire (12V constant) and creating a short circuit. Replacing the clock spring with a genuine unit (P/N BYD-EG-5820100) cleared the fault. The cause: prolonged full-lock steering led to cable overstretching and fatigue.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

E2 aftermarket steering wheel heater caused airbag power supply short circuit

A 2020 BYD E2 owner fitted an aftermarket steering wheel heating cover and incorrectly connected the heating power wire to unused terminals on the airbag connector (on some models spare terminals sit adjacent to the airbag circuit). While driving, vibration caused the terminals to make contact, triggering DTC B160212. During repair, technicians found burned airbag harness terminals. Replaced the clock spring and airbag harness connector, removed the unauthorised modification wiring, and resolved the fault. Never modify SRS-related circuits.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Flood-damaged vehicle SRS connector corroded and shorted

The 2019 Qin EV had a blocked sunroof drain tube that caused rainwater to accumulate beneath the A-pillar and leak into the wiring harness connector below the steering wheel. Disassembly revealed electrolytic corrosion deposits between the airbag circuit terminal and the power terminal inside the connector, forming a low-resistance path (measured at approximately 200 ohms). Cleaning the connector terminals, treating them with an electronic cleaner, applying conductive protective grease, and repairing the wiring harness insulation cleared the fault. Clearing the drain tube prevented further water ingress.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

False positive: SRS ECU internal driver circuit fault

An E3 vehicle repeatedly logged DTC B160212. Replacing the clock spring and airbag module did not fix the fault. Oscilloscope testing found an abnormal 12V on the SRS ECU airbag drive terminal at rest (normally 0V or a pulse detection voltage). Disassembling the ECU revealed a shorted diode next to the internal boost capacitor, causing the detection circuit to incorrectly interpret a short to power. Replacing the SRS control unit (online programming and matching required) completely resolved the fault.
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.