This DTC indicates an undervoltage fault in the low-pressure side control circuit of the BYD new energy vehicle thermal management system — Atto 8
This DTC indicates an undervoltage fault in the low-pressure side control circuit of the BYD new energy vehicle thermal management system.
Specifically, the 12V low-voltage supply to the air conditioning system (electric compressor, PTC heater, or thermal management control module) drops below the normal operating threshold (generally below 9.5V or 80% of the system set value), or the A/C low-pressure sensor reference or signal voltage is abnormal.
In models such as the Qin EV300 and Qin PRO DM, this fault causes insufficient power supply to the Thermal Management Module (TMM) or Air Conditioning Control Unit (ACU).
This shortage can prevent the electric compressor from starting, limit PTC heater output, and disable battery cooling and heating functions.
Although the vehicle remains drivable, A/C cooling and heating performance drops significantly.
In extreme cases, high-voltage battery thermal management fails and triggers power limitation.
- 1Insufficient 12V low-voltage battery charge, battery aging, or a charging system fault causing a power supply voltage drop at the thermal management module.
- 2Loose low-voltage connectors, oxidized pins, or backed-out pins at the Thermal Management Module (TMM), air conditioning controller, or electric compressor, causing excessive contact resistance.
- 3A/C low-pressure sensor (located at the compressor suction port or liquid line) circuit short to ground, open circuit, or sensor internal short circuit
- 4Engine compartment or chassis wiring harness insulation damaged by high temperatures or wear, causing intermittent short circuits or voltage drops.
- 5Mismatched rated current of related fuses (such as the compressor control fuse and TMM power supply fuse), burnt fuse base, or burnt relay contacts.
- 1Use the VDS diagnostic tool to read the DTC freeze frame, confirm if B123A16 is a current fault, and record the ambient temperature, battery SOC, and low-voltage side voltage when the fault occurred.
- 2Measure the 12V battery static voltage (should be ≥ 12.4V) and dynamic charging voltage (should be ≥ 13.8V), and check the battery state of health (SOH).
- 3Check the power supply fuse (usually 30A or 40A), relay, and connector for the thermal management control module (located in the front compartment or passenger compartment). Measure the voltage between the module B+ terminal and ground to verify it is within the 11-14V range.
- 4Check the electric compressor low-voltage connector (4-pin or 6-pin, including 12V+, GND, CANH, CANL, etc.), measure the 12V supply voltage, and inspect the pins for oxidation or backing out.
- 5If equipped with a PTC heater, check the low-voltage supply voltage of the PTC controller; check the 5V reference voltage and signal feedback voltage of the air conditioning low-pressure sensor (normal: 0.5-4.5V).
- 6Perform wiring harness wiggle and vibration tests. Inspect for wiring harness wear, focusing on the front compartment high-temperature area and the firewall pass-through. Repair poor connections or replace the wiring harness.
- 7Clear the fault code, execute the air conditioning system self-learning procedure (e.g., compressor run-in procedure), perform a cooling/heating function test, and observe whether the 'low-pressure side voltage' in the data stream returns to normal.
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