This DTC indicates the signal circuit of the automatic air conditioning system’s sun sensor (solar intensity sensor) has shorted to the vehicle power supply (B+, usually a constant 12V supply) — Qin Plus
This DTC indicates the signal circuit of the automatic air conditioning system’s sun sensor (solar intensity sensor) has shorted to the vehicle power supply (B+, usually a constant 12V supply).
The sun sensor generally uses a photodiode or photoresistor.
During normal operation, the sensor outputs an analog voltage signal of 0.1-4.9V to the air conditioning controller (integrated into the thermal management module).
The signal voltage increases as sunlight intensity increases.
When the signal wire shorts to power, the controller detects the voltage remains continuously above 4.9V (close to battery voltage, 12-14V) and logs a short-to-power fault.
This fault disables the automatic air conditioning system's solar compensation function.
The air conditioning controller cannot automatically adjust outlet air temperature and blower speed based on sunlight intensity.
In extreme cases, the short-circuit current may burn out the air conditioning controller's internal sampling circuit.
Consequently, the system reports a severe fault and may enter protection mode.
- 1The sunlight sensor wiring harness rubs against a sharp metal edge inside the dashboard. Damaged insulation causes the signal wire to short-circuit to the constant power wire. This typically occurs after driving on rough roads or after dashboard removal and installation.
- 2During windshield replacement or dash cam installation, the technician accidentally damaged the sun sensor wiring harness, pinching the signal and power wires and causing a short circuit.
- 3Internal photoelectric element breakdown or seal failure in the sun sensor causes an internal short circuit between the signal terminal and the power supply terminal. This typically occurs in high-temperature, high-humidity environments or after the vehicle drives through water.
- 4Internal sampling circuit fault in the air conditioning controller (thermal management ECU) abnormally pulling the signal line up to the supply voltage, or water ingress into the controller connector causing a short circuit between terminals.
- 5After a minor collision in the front or passenger compartment, the wiring harness bracket deforms and displaces, causing the sunlight sensor wiring harness to interfere with and chafe against constant-power circuits such as the cigarette lighter and reading lamp.
- 1Use the VDS2100 diagnostic tool to read the DTC freeze frame, confirm the sunlight sensor voltage when the fault occurred (usually reading above 5.0V or 12V), and check if the current data stream remains abnormal.
- 2Remove the upper dashboard trim panel, locate the sunlight sensor below the windshield (usually integrated into the same module as the automatic headlight sensor), and disconnect the sensor connector.
- 3Measure the voltage between the sensor connector signal pin (usually pin 2) and ground: if the voltage remains 12V, this indicates a wiring harness short circuit; if the voltage is 0V, this indicates an internal sensor short circuit.
- 4If the wiring harness has a short circuit, trace the sensor harness to the air conditioning controller (located inside the dashboard or front compartment). Inspect specifically for harness wear or damaged insulation at the dashboard frame routing holes and the firewall grommet. Repair and rewrap the damaged harness.
- 5If the sensor has an internal short circuit, replace the sunlight sensor assembly (part numbers usually begin with a BC series prefix). After replacement, use a diagnostic tool to perform air conditioning system self-learning or sensor calibration (required on some models).
- 6Clear the fault code. Read the data stream while illuminating the sensor with a high-intensity flashlight and again while covering the sensor. Confirm the voltage changes normally within the 0.5V-4.5V range. Road test the vehicle to verify the automatic air conditioning solar compensation function has returned to normal.
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