This DTC indicates an open circuit in the left heat sink temperature sensor of the thermal management system PTC (Positive Temperature Coefficient) heater — Atto 8
This DTC indicates an open circuit in the left heat sink temperature sensor of the thermal management system PTC (Positive Temperature Coefficient) heater.
This sensor, typically an NTC (Negative Temperature Coefficient) thermistor, monitors the real-time surface temperature of the PTC ceramic heating element to prevent overheating.
The ECU determines an open circuit when it detects a continuously high sensor signal voltage (typically the 5V reference voltage returning without voltage division).
This fault triggers a protective shutdown of the PTC heater, resulting in no warm air in the cabin.
In extreme cases, if the PTC overheats and the failed sensor cannot provide feedback, it may trigger a high-voltage safety cut-off or risk thermal runaway.
- 1Internal open circuit in the temperature sensor: Aging, thermal shock, or mechanical stress fractures the NTC thermistor internally, resulting in infinite resistance.
- 2Wiring harness connector fault: Prolonged high-temperature exposure causes oxidized or recessed pins in the connector near the PTC assembly, or a loose locking tab causes poor contact.
- 3Wiring harness physical damage: The wiring harness in the engine compartment or left side of the front compartment rubs against sharp edges due to vehicle vibration, breaking the signal or ground wire.
- 4PTC control board sampling circuit fault: A damaged sampling resistor, damaged filter capacitor, or cold solder joint on the control board causes the ECU to falsely detect a sensor open circuit.
- 5Improper sensor installation: Failing to seat the sensor correctly during maintenance, or applying excessive torque, resulting in a cracked housing and broken internal wires.
- 1Use VDS to read the complete fault information and freeze frame data, confirm the PTC operating status and ambient temperature when the fault occurred, and check for other thermal management-related fault codes.
- 2Visually inspect the PTC heater left temperature sensor. Check the wiring harness sleeve for damage and the connector for looseness, water ingress, or burn marks.
- 3Disconnect the sensor connector and use a multimeter to measure the resistance between the two sensor terminals. At room temperature (25°C), the NTC resistance should be 2kΩ-10kΩ (refer to the vehicle repair manual for specific values). If the multimeter displays OL (open circuit), replace the sensor.
- 4Check wiring harness continuity: Measure the continuity of the signal wire and ground wire between the sensor connector and the air conditioning controller (or PTC controller). Resistance must be less than 1Ω. Check for shorts to ground and to power.
- 5Check the reference voltage: Turn the ignition ON. Without disconnecting the connector, measure the voltage between the signal wire and ground. The reference voltage should be 5V. If the voltage is 5V but the sensor side has an open circuit, confirm the ECU-side sampling is normal.
- 6Repair or replace: Replace a damaged sensor with a genuine temperature sensor (apply thermal grease and tighten to the specified torque); repair or replace a faulty wiring harness and verify the waterproof seal.
- 7Clear the fault code and perform a PTC function test: set the heater to the maximum temperature, observe the left heat sink temperature in the data stream to verify it is normal (temperature must rise gradually as the PTC operates), and verify the fault code does not recur.
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