DTC B2A0D13 indicates an open circuit in the Battery Pack Inlet Coolant Temperature Sensor — Qin Plus
DTC B2A0D13 indicates an open circuit in the Battery Pack Inlet Coolant Temperature Sensor.
This sensor is located at the inlet of the battery thermal management system cooling circuit.
Typically an NTC thermistor, the sensor provides a 0-5V analog voltage signal to the Battery Management System (BMS) or Thermal Management Controller (TMS) to monitor the temperature of the coolant entering the battery pack in real time.
An open circuit fault means the control unit detects that the signal voltage remains continuously in an open-circuit state (typically the 5V reference voltage or 0V, depending on circuit design), preventing it from obtaining actual temperature data.
This fault causes the thermal management system to enter fail-safe mode.
The system cannot accurately regulate the battery pack temperature, which may result in the following: (1) The system disables high-power charging and discharging, limiting vehicle power output. (2) The battery coolant pump and PTC heater fail to regulate to the target temperature, creating a risk of battery overheating or low-temperature damage. (3) In extreme cases, the system triggers the high-voltage interlock, preventing the vehicle from starting.
- 1Broken sensor wiring harness or loose connector: Internal copper wires in the harness near the battery pack break due to long-term vibration, thermal cycling, or improper assembly, or a failed connector latch causes a poor connection.
- 2Internal open circuit in the coolant temperature sensor: Aging, cracking, or detached solder joints on the internal thermistor element cause infinite resistance.
- 3Connector terminal corrosion or pin back-out: Coolant leaks or vehicle wading causes water ingress into the sensor plug, resulting in terminal oxidation, corrosion, or backed-out pins.
- 4Harness insulation wear causing hidden open circuit: Prolonged harness chafing against the battery pack housing edge, firewall pass-through, or chassis undertray causes partial or complete internal wire breakage.
- 5Internal control unit sampling circuit fault: Damage to the temperature sampling interface circuit in the BMS or thermal management controller prevents correct identification of the sensor signal.
- 1Connect the VDS2000/VDS1000 diagnostic tool, read the freeze frame data for DTC B2A0D13, and record the ambient temperature, battery temperature, and vehicle status when the fault occurred.
- 2Visually inspect the coolant temperature sensor connector near the battery pack coolant inlet pipe for obvious looseness, signs of water ingress, corrosion, or wiring harness damage.
- 3Disconnect the sensor connector. Measure the sensor body resistance using a multimeter. Normal values vary by temperature (e.g., approx. 2.5 kΩ at 25°C, approx. 7.5 kΩ at 0°C). Replace the sensor if the reading is infinity (OL).
- 4Measure wiring harness side voltage: Turn the ignition switch to ON. Signal wire to ground voltage should be approximately 5V reference voltage (or match manufacturer specifications), and ground wire to ground resistance should be less than 1Ω. If voltage is abnormal, check wiring harness continuity.
- 5Perform a wiring harness continuity test: Measure the continuity resistance of the signal wire and ground wire from the sensor connector to the BMS/TMS control unit. Resistance must be less than 1Ω. Focus the inspection on the wiring harness near the battery pack, firewall grommet, and chassis underbody shield.
- 6Check the coolant level and lines: Verify no coolant leaks have corroded the wiring harness. Repair any leaks and replace the damaged wiring harness if necessary.
- 7Repair or replace faulty components: Replace with an OEM coolant temperature sensor (apply thermal conductive silicone grease), repair the broken wiring harness (use waterproof heat-shrink tubing), and verify the connector locking tab fully engages.
- 8Clear the fault code and verify function: read the data stream to confirm the inlet coolant temperature displays normally (deviation from actual temperature <2℃), then perform a fast charge or high-power discharge test to confirm the thermal management system operates normally.
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