DTC B2A0813 indicates an open circuit in the air conditioning system evaporator outlet refrigerant temperature sensor (PT sensor) circuit — Qin Plus
DTC B2A0813 indicates an open circuit in the air conditioning system evaporator outlet refrigerant temperature sensor (PT sensor) circuit.
This sensor uses an NTC thermistor to monitor the evaporator outlet refrigerant temperature in real time (typical range -40°C to +85°C).
It provides critical temperature feedback to the HVAC ECU to precisely control the electronic expansion valve opening, compressor speed, and blower airflow, preventing evaporator surface icing and optimizing cooling efficiency.
The ECU logs an open circuit fault when it detects the sensor signal voltage continuously exceeding the threshold (typically above 4.95V, indicating an open circuit) for longer than a set time (e.g., 2 seconds).
This fault triggers the air conditioning system fail-safe mode, forcibly limiting compressor operation or completely stopping cooling, and may illuminate the relevant thermal management warning lamp.
Continuing to drive the vehicle may cause abnormal battery pack or motor heat dissipation, making this a severe fault.
- 1Aging or physical damage to the thermistor element inside the sensor body causes an open circuit. This is common in high-mileage vehicles (>80,000 km) or vehicles exposed to prolonged extreme temperatures.
- 2Loose wiring harness connectors, backed-out terminals, or poor contact, especially in areas near the evaporator housing prone to frequent vibration, and connectors not fully seated after previous repairs.
- 3Physical damage to the wiring harness, including broken internal copper wires due to insulation wear, a severed wiring harness due to underbody scraping, or an open circuit caused by rodents gnawing the wiring.
- 4Bent, corroded, or oxidized sensor pins, common after driving through water or long-term use in high-humidity areas, causing infinite contact resistance between the pins and the connector.
- 5Air conditioning control unit (HVAC ECU) internal signal processing circuit fault or abnormal reference voltage output (missing 5V supply), interrupting the sensor power supply.
- 1Use the BYD VDS2000/VDS6000 diagnostic tool to read fault codes. Confirm B2A0813 is a current (Active) fault, not a history fault, and record freeze frame data (ambient temperature, evaporator temperature, etc.).
- 2Visually inspect the temperature sensor on the evaporator outlet pipe and the wiring harness routing. Check for obvious damage, crushing, or loose connectors. Closely inspect the harness protective sleeve at the firewall pass-through.
- 3Disconnect the sensor connector and use a multimeter to measure the resistance between the two sensor terminals. The standard value at 25°C is 10kΩ±5%. Replace the sensor if the reading is OL (infinite). Also measure the voltage between the power supply terminal and ground; it must be 5V±0.25V.
- 4Perform a circuit continuity test: Measure the continuity of the signal wire and ground wire separately from the sensor connector to the HVAC ECU connector (usually behind the dashboard or glove box). Resistance should be <1Ω. Measure insulation resistance to ground; it should be >10MΩ.
- 5Check the HVAC ECU connector pins for push-out, corrosion, or spread terminals. If necessary, use the dedicated probe test tool to check terminal retention force.
- 6Repair or replace the faulty wiring harness/connector. If the sensor is faulty, replace it with a genuine evaporator outlet temperature sensor (part number reference: EA-8123456 for ATTO 3, TA-1234567 for Qin EV, etc.; verify based on the specific vehicle model). Apply an appropriate amount of silicone grease for proper heat transfer.
- 7Reconnect all connectors, use the diagnostic tool to clear the fault code, start the vehicle, and turn on the air conditioning (A/C MAX mode). Observe the 'Evaporator Outlet Temp' value in the data stream to verify it drops normally during cooling (typically to 2-8°C) to confirm fault resolution.
Qin EV300 evaporator temperature sensor wiring harness chafed, open circuit
Intermittent fault on new Yuan Plus from loose sensor connector
Tang DM sensor pins corroded open after water wading
Aftermarket modification on Song Pro EV caused wiring harness to break under tension
Han EV heat pump system sensor failure due to aging