This fault code indicates a functional failure of the No — Atto 8
This fault code indicates a functional failure of the No. 3 IGBT (Insulated Gate Bipolar Transistor) driver chip in the thermal management system.
In BYD Qin series new energy vehicles, the A/C PTC (Positive Temperature Coefficient) heater uses an IGBT module for high-power PWM modulation control, where "3#" refers to the third-phase drive channel or the third IGBT unit.
The IGBT driver chip converts low-voltage logic signals from the controller into high-voltage, high-frequency pulse signals to drive the IGBT gate, precisely regulating PTC heater power (0-100% duty cycle control).
This fault occurs when the driver chip fails to output the normal gate drive voltage (typically a +15V/-8V push-pull signal), or when the chip’s internal desaturation protection or overcurrent protection triggers abnormally, preventing the IGBT from conducting or forcing it to remain off.
This directly causes partial or complete PTC heater failure, affecting cabin heating.
In low-temperature environments, it also disables battery pack preheating, potentially triggering a vehicle thermal management fault and limiting power output.
- 1The IGBT driver chip inside the PTC heater assembly overheated and burned out, or gate oxidation reduced drive capability.
- 2Open circuit or resistance drift in the gate resistor (typically 10-47Ω) of the IGBT gate drive circuit, causing drive signal attenuation.
- 3Aging or moisture in the PTC heating element reduces insulation resistance, which increases leakage current between the IGBT drain and source and triggers driver chip protection.
- 4Poor contact, backed-out terminals, or oxidized pins at the low-voltage drive wiring harness connector (such as GJ106 or GJK3) between the air conditioning controller and the PTC, causing intermittent interruption of the drive signal.
- 5Poor circulation in the thermal management system cooling circuit or dried thermal grease causes the IGBT module junction temperature to exceed 150°C, resulting in thermal damage.
- 1High-voltage safety procedure: Wear insulated gloves, disconnect the front compartment Manual Service Disconnect (MSD), wait at least 5 minutes for the high-voltage capacitors to fully discharge, and use a multimeter to confirm the high-voltage bus voltage is <60V.
- 2Fault code analysis: Connect the VDS2000/VDS diagnostic tool and read the B121C09 freeze frame data. Record the PTC operating duty cycle, IGBT temperature, and high-voltage bus voltage at the time of the fault to determine if this is a current hard fault.
- 3Low-voltage wiring harness inspection: Inspect the low-voltage drive wiring harness from the air conditioning controller to the PTC heater (including the PWM signal wire, fault feedback wire, and 15V power wire). Specifically inspect pins 2 and 3 of connector GJ106 for oxidation, enlarged terminals, or looseness.
- 4High-voltage insulation check: Use a 1000V megohmmeter to measure the insulation resistance between the PTC high-voltage input terminal and body ground. Standard value: >500 MΩ. A low insulation value (<20 MΩ) indicates a breakdown in the PTC internal heating element or IGBT module.
- 5Drive circuit measurement: Reconnect the low-voltage battery. Do not disconnect the PTC connector. Use an oscilloscope to measure the #3 IGBT driver chip input PWM waveform (normally a 5V square wave) and output gate waveform (normally a 15V square wave). If the input is normal but the output is abnormal, the driver chip is faulty.
- 6Component-level repair: Epoxy resin potting typically encapsulates the IGBT driver chip inside the PTC heater, preventing separate replacement. Replace the complete PTC heater assembly (verify the part number by vehicle model, e.g., Qin EV300: LBC-8113100).
- 7System calibration and verification: After replacement, clear the fault code and perform the 'A/C system self-learning' or 'PTC calibration' procedure (if available in VDS). Set the heater to HI. Read the data stream to confirm the 3# IGBT drive duty cycle is normal (varies with temperature setting). Verify the air outlet temperature rises above 40°C within 3 minutes.
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