This DTC indicates a short to ground in the refrigerant temperature sensor signal circuit at the inlet or outlet of the battery cooling system plate heat exchanger (Chiller/battery cooler), or an internal short circuit within the sensor — Qin Plus
This DTC indicates a short to ground in the refrigerant temperature sensor signal circuit at the inlet or outlet of the battery cooling system plate heat exchanger (Chiller/battery cooler), or an internal short circuit within the sensor.
This NTC thermistor outputs a 0.5-4.5 V analog voltage signal to the Thermal Management System (TMS) controller or A/C controller to monitor the temperature of the refrigerant flowing through the plate heat exchanger in real time.
This parameter is critical for precisely controlling battery cooling intensity and preventing battery overcooling or overheating.
The controller logs a short circuit fault when the signal voltage remains below 0.1 V (near 0 V) for a specified duration (typically 2-5 seconds).
The thermal management system then enters fail-safe mode, immediately cutting off refrigerant flow to the battery cooling circuit and limiting battery charge and discharge power.
In severe cases, the system triggers a vehicle-level 'Thermal Management System Fault' warning and prohibits high-voltage power-on.
This prevents continued operation with unknown refrigerant temperatures, which could cause battery thermal runaway or compressor liquid slugging damage.
- 1Damaged sensor wiring harness insulation causing a short to body ground (commonly resulting from chassis bottoming out, stone impacts, or prolonged chafing against sharp metal edges after harness retaining clips loosen)
- 2Internal NTC thermistor breakdown or circuit board short circuit in the plate heat exchanger refrigerant temperature sensor (aging, overheating, or manufacturing defects)
- 3Water ingress and corrosion in the connector causing a short circuit between the signal pin and ground pin (driving through water, improper high-pressure washing, aging sealing ring)
- 4Short to ground in the internal signal sampling circuit of the thermal management controller (TMS) or air conditioning controller (electrostatic breakdown or water damage; relatively uncommon)
- 5Incorrect wiring harness routing during repair causes metal bracket burrs to cut the insulation or the high-temperature exhaust pipe to melt it, resulting in a short circuit.
- 1Use a BYD VDS2000 or Launch X431 to read all fault codes. Check for accompanying B2A0F (open circuit) or other thermal management fault codes. Record abnormal temperature values in the freeze frame data.
- 2Visually inspect the wiring harness at the plate heat exchanger (located in the front compartment or at the front of the chassis battery pack, connecting the electric compressor outlet pipe and the battery cooling pipe) for damage, crushing, or signs of water ingress. Focus on the contact points between the wiring harness and the metal body brackets.
- 3Disconnect the sensor connector (usually a 2-pin black waterproof plug on the side of the plate heat exchanger housing). Measure the resistance between the two sensor terminals using a multimeter. At 25°C ambient temperature, the normal value is approximately 10kΩ±5%. If the resistance approaches 0Ω or infinity, the sensor has an internal short circuit or open circuit.
- 4Leave the connector disconnected and turn the key to the ON position. Measure the voltage to ground at the harness-side signal pin (typically the 5V reference voltage). It should read approximately 5V. If it reads 0V, check the wiring harness for a short to ground or an internal ECU fault.
- 5Use a megohmmeter to measure the insulation resistance between the signal wire and body ground. The resistance must be greater than 10MΩ. If the resistance is too low, inspect the wiring harness in sections. Focus on harness wear points at the firewall pass-through and inside the underbody shield.
- 6If an internal short circuit in the sensor is confirmed, recover the refrigerant (R134a or R1234yf), remove the plate heat exchanger end cover or lines, and replace the refrigerant temperature sensor (some models require replacing the entire plate heat exchanger assembly).
- 7Repair the damaged section of the wiring harness (use heat-shrink tubing or waterproof insulating tape for double-layer insulation). Maintain a clearance of at least 20mm between the wiring harness and metal parts. Apply conductive grease and reconnect the connector.
- 8Refill the specified amount of refrigerant oil and refrigerant. Evacuate the system to -95 kPa and hold for 15 minutes to confirm no leaks. Use the diagnostic tool to clear the fault code. Perform a thermal management system self-check and a road test to verify the battery cooling function.
Underbody scrape wore through wiring harness causing intermittent short circuit
Internal short in aging sensor caused battery cooling failure
Connector water ingress after wading caused corrosion and short circuit
False alarm from wiring harness installed incorrectly after accident repair