DTC B1752-00 indicates the right rear side airbag igniter circuit is shorted to vehicle power (B+) — Seal U
DTC B1752-00 indicates the right rear side airbag igniter circuit is shorted to vehicle power (B+).
In the SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) circuit architecture, the airbag igniter is a low-impedance (nominal 2-5Ω) resistance wire.
Normally, the SRS control unit uses an internal boost circuit to supply a momentary high current (approx. 1-3A) to deploy the airbag during a collision.
Detecting a short to the 12V power supply in the igniter harness indicates an abnormal high-potential path in the circuit.
This creates two risks: first, continuous power supply may cause accidental airbag deployment without a collision (although modern SRS controllers typically feature short-circuit protection); second, during an actual collision, the external power short prevents the control unit from forming an effective current loop to deploy the airbag, disabling the safety function.
Consequently, the SRS control unit immediately illuminates the airbag warning lamp, stores this DTC, disables the right rear side airbag and related linked protection functions, and enters fail-safe mode.
Frequent folding of the right rear seat caused the wiring harness to wear through and short circuit.
C-pillar water leak caused airbag connector corrosion and short circuit
Airbag module internal short circuit false alarm.
Seat removal and refitting pinched the wiring harness, causing a short circuit.
SRS control unit internal driver circuit fault