B1933 Code: Meaning, Symptoms, Causes & Fix

B1933

Overview

B1933 is triggered when monitoring logic identifies an issue with Air Bag Passenger Circuit Open affecting body electronics and comfort modules.

Symptoms

  • related warning lamp illuminated
  • battery draw complaints
  • feature inoperative intermittently

Common causes

  • Broken terminal inside harness affecting air bag passenger circuit open
  • Disconnected or loose connector
  • Connector pin damage/corrosion or harness stress near related components

How to diagnose B1933

  1. Confirm B1933 and capture freeze-frame data with a professional scan tool.
  2. Inspect wiring, connectors, and grounds related to air bag passenger circuit open for obvious defects.
  3. Use a continuity test from module pin to component to identify opens/high resistance.
  4. Check for related DTCs to identify the root-cause chain before replacing parts.
  5. After repair, clear codes and confirm readiness monitors complete without recurrence.

Severity of code B1933

Moderate: This code is moderate severity: the vehicle may still operate, but fault progression can increase repair cost over time.

Can you drive with B1933?

Most vehicles can be driven short-term with B1933, but postpone heavy load/highway driving until repaired.

If the warning lamp is flashing or drivability/safety is affected, avoid driving and diagnose immediately.

How to fix it (step-by-step)

  1. Repair obvious wiring/connector faults first to prevent repeat parts replacement.
  2. Address the root fault mode (open) in the air bag passenger circuit open circuit/system.
  3. Apply the required relearn/adaptation procedure if specified by service information.
  4. Road-test and verify B1933 remains cleared under the conditions that originally set the code.

Fix options

  • Clear corrosion and protect terminals.
  • Repair open circuit and secure connector lock.
  • Clear DTCs and verify with live data and completed drive cycle.

Typical repair cost

$160-$850

Common mistakes when diagnosing B1933

  • Replacing parts without verifying voltage, ground, and signal integrity first.
  • Ignoring related stored/pending codes that indicate upstream faults.
  • Skipping post-repair verification drive cycle and readiness checks.

B1933 in common vehicles

B1933 appears across makes such as Nissan, Hyundai, Kia, Volkswagen. Failure patterns differ by platform: wiring routes, software calibration, and component supplier revisions can change root cause.

Frequently asked questions

What causes B1933?

B1933 is commonly set by open faults affecting air bag passenger circuit open.

How much does it cost to fix B1933?

For B1933, repair costs are typically $160-$850 depending on exact root cause, labor rates, and part quality.

Can I clear B1933 without repair?

You can clear B1933 temporarily, but the code usually returns until the underlying fault is corrected.

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