DTC B122A13 indicates an open circuit fault in the thermal management system coolant temperature sensor circuit — Qin Plus
DTC B122A13 indicates an open circuit fault in the thermal management system coolant temperature sensor circuit.
In models such as the BYD Qin EV300, this sensor typically mounts in the PTC (Positive Temperature Coefficient) water heater or the battery thermal management circuit.
It monitors coolant temperature to control heating power and battery thermal management strategies.
An open circuit means the ECU detects a continuously high sensor signal voltage (typically near the 5V reference voltage) and cannot acquire the actual temperature signal.
This fault forces the PTC heater into protection mode and halts operation, resulting in no warm air in the cabin.
It may also affect the battery preheating function, restricting charging speed or preventing charging in low-temperature environments.
In severe cases, the vehicle may trigger a thermal management system fault and enter limp mode.
- 1The coolant temperature sensor internal thermistor is open or damaged, preventing a complete circuit.
- 2Loose sensor wiring harness connector, backed-out terminal, or poor contact, which frequently occurs in the high-temperature and high-vibration environment of the engine compartment.
- 3Wiring harness wear or breakage, commonly at friction points such as the firewall pass-through and wiring harness mounting bracket edges.
- 4PTC heater assembly internal temperature sensor fault (Some models integrate the sensor into the PTC assembly and do not allow separate replacement.)
- 5Internal signal acquisition circuit fault in the thermal management controller (air conditioning controller) causing a false open circuit.
- 1Connect the BYD dedicated diagnostic tool (VDS or ED400), read the DTC freeze frame and data stream, determine which coolant temperature sensor has no signal output, and record the ambient temperature at the time of the fault.
- 2Visually inspect the sensor wiring harness connector for looseness, water ingress, or corrosion, focusing on connectors in the high-temperature area near the PTC heater. Clean and reconnect if necessary.
- 3Disconnect the sensor connector and use a multimeter to measure the sensor resistance. Compare the reading with the temperature-resistance characteristic curve in the repair manual (typically about 2-10kΩ at 25°C) to determine if the sensor is normal.
- 4With the ignition switch ON, measure the reference voltage (usually 5V) and check the ground wire at the wiring harness connector to verify the ECU power supply is normal.
- 5Measure wiring harness continuity between the sensor connector and the thermal management controller (or air conditioning controller). Closely inspect harness integrity at the intermediate connector and firewall pass-through.
- 6If the sensor is integrated into the PTC heater assembly and confirmed faulty, replace the PTC heater assembly. If the sensor is separate, replace the sensor.
- 7After completing the repair, clear the fault codes. Perform a PTC function test and a road test. Verify the data stream temperature displays normally and the fault code does not return.
BYD Qin EV300 PTC heater inlet sensor open circuit causing no heating
Wiring harness chafed through at the firewall penetration, causing an intermittent open circuit.
Water ingress corroded the connector, causing poor contact.
Open circuit in battery cooling circuit temperature sensor limits charging power.
False positive due to internal circuit fault in AC controller