This DTC indicates a short to ground in the PTC (Positive Temperature Coefficient) heater left heat sink temperature sensor signal circuit, or an internal sensor short circuit — Seal 6 EV
This DTC indicates a short to ground in the PTC (Positive Temperature Coefficient) heater left heat sink temperature sensor signal circuit, or an internal sensor short circuit.
BYD Qin series vehicles typically integrate this sensor into the PTC heater assembly to monitor heater core temperature and prevent overheating.
During a short circuit, the air conditioning controller detects an abnormally low voltage signal (near 0V) and triggers protection logic to cut PTC power, disabling the heating function.
Because the PTC heater draws high operating current (up to tens of amperes), temperature monitoring failure risks overheating or fire.
Therefore, the system classifies this as a severe fault (Level 3).
- 1PTC temperature sensor wiring harness insulation damaged: High temperatures and vibration in the motor compartment cause the sensor harness to rub against metal body edges, shorting the signal wire to ground.
- 2Internal short circuit in the sensor body: NTC thermistor encapsulation failure or moisture ingress causes resistance to drop abnormally to nearly 0 Ω.
- 3PTC heater assembly internal fault: Insulation layer breakdown between the heat sink temperature sensor and the PTC ceramic element causes a short circuit.
- 4Air conditioning controller internal short circuit: The pull-up or pull-down resistor in the controller internal sampling circuit or the ADC interface shorts to ground, triggering a false sensor fault.
- 5Connector water ingress and corrosion: After driving through water or washing the vehicle, poor PTC connector sealing causes a short circuit between pins or a short to ground.
- 1Connect the VDS2000 diagnostic tool, read the complete fault codes and freeze frame data, and confirm the fault frequency (current/history). Check for an accompanying B121013 (open circuit) fault appearing alternately, indicating an intermittent contact issue.
- 2Disconnect the 12V battery negative terminal. Wait 5 minutes, then unplug the PTC heater temperature sensor connector (a 2-pin black plug typically near the heater core). Measure the resistance at the sensor terminals. A normal NTC sensor reads 10 kΩ ±5% at 25°C. A reading of 0–10 Ω indicates an internal sensor short circuit.
- 3If sensor resistance is normal, measure resistance to ground at the harness-side signal pin. The normal value is infinite. If continuity exists, inspect the harness routing, focusing on insulation damage at the firewall pass-through and harness retaining clip edges.
- 4Check the PTC heater assembly: If the wiring harness is normal, remove the PTC assembly and measure the insulation resistance between the sensor connector and the housing. The resistance must be greater than 20MΩ. Otherwise, the PTC assembly has an internal short circuit. Replace the PTC heater assembly (e.g., part number BC-8123100).
- 5Check the control module: If all above checks are normal, disconnect the air conditioning controller (or thermal management integrated module) and measure the resistance to ground at the wiring harness end. After ruling out a wiring harness fault, check the controller internal circuit. If necessary, flash the latest software version or replace the controller.
- 6Post-repair procedure: After replacing the faulty component, clear the fault code, start the vehicle, and set the heater to the maximum temperature. Observe the 'PTC left-side heat sink temperature' value in the data stream. The value must rise during heating (normal range: -40°C to 150°C). Confirm the fault code does not recur.
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