B122013

This DTC indicates an open circuit in the thermal management system right heatsink temperature sensor (NTC thermistor) — Seal 6 EV

Thermal Management System

This DTC indicates an open circuit in the thermal management system right heatsink temperature sensor (NTC thermistor).

In BYD Qin EV/DM models, this sensor typically mounts on the PTC heater heatsink or the motor controller (MCU) IGBT heatsink to monitor power device operating temperatures in real time.

When sensor wiring breaks, the sensor fails, or the connector makes poor contact, the control module detects a voltage signal outside the valid range (typically because the 5V reference voltage fails to complete a circuit) and logs this fault.

Because the system cannot accurately monitor the heatsink temperature, it triggers a thermal management protection strategy.

This strategy may disable the PTC heater or limit motor power output.

In extreme cases, power devices may overheat and fail, making this a severe fault.

4
Cases Logged
5
Causes
  • 1Temperature sensor aging or physical damage: Internal thermistor element has an open circuit. Resistance measures infinite at room temperature (normally approximately 10kΩ, varying with temperature).
  • 2Wiring harness worn or broken: High temperatures in the motor compartment or front compartment degrade and damage the sensor wiring harness insulation, or vehicle vibration rubs the harness against sharp edges, breaking the copper wires.
  • 3Poor connector contact: Loose sensor plug, backed-out terminals, oxidized or corroded pins, or improperly seated connector during servicing causing an intermittent connection.
  • 4Water ingress corrosion: During front compartment cleaning or wading, water enters the sensor connector, causing terminal oxidation or a short circuit that burns out the terminal and creates an open circuit.
  • 5Control module sampling circuit fault (rare): Damage to the internal sampling resistor or reference voltage circuit in the air conditioning controller or thermal management module causes a false sensor open circuit detection.
  • 1
    Diagnostic tool data stream analysis: Connect the VDS or dedicated diagnostic tool and read the 'right-side heat sink temperature' data stream. If the reading shows -40°C, 255°C, or a fixed value, confirm the signal is abnormal. Simultaneously read the relevant PTC or MCU temperature data to determine if the fault involves the same component.
  • 2
    Sensor body inspection: Disconnect the sensor connector and use a multimeter to measure the resistance between the two sensor terminals. At room temperature (25°C), the standard value is approximately 10 kΩ ±5%. If the resistance is infinite or significantly deviates from the temperature-resistance curve, replace the sensor.
  • 3
    Circuit continuity check: Leave the sensor connector disconnected. Measure harness continuity from the control module side. Measure the harness resistance between the corresponding BMS or air conditioning controller pin and the sensor connector. Resistance must be less than 1Ω. Check for shorts to ground and power. Confirm only an open circuit exists, not a short circuit.
  • 4
    Connector inspection: Visually inspect the sensor plug and socket terminals for oxidation, burning, backed-out pins, or looseness. Use a dedicated probe to test terminal retention force. Clean the plug/socket with electrical contact cleaner or replace as necessary.
  • 5
    Repair verification: After repairing or replacing the faulty component, clear the fault code. Start the vehicle and operate the PTC heater or drive motor to raise the heat sink temperature. Observe the data stream to verify the temperature value changes accordingly and confirm fault resolution.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Qin EV300 PTC heater temperature sensor open circuit due to aging.

A 2017 BYD Qin EV300 with 120,000 km on the clock displayed ‘Power System Fault’ on the instrument cluster and had no heating. Read DTC B122013. Live data showed right-side heat sink temperature at –40°C. Removed and inspected the PTC heater water outlet temperature sensor (right-side heat sink sensor); the connector was oxidised and the sensor measured infinite resistance. Replaced the sensor. The new sensor measured 10.2 kΩ at 22°C ambient. Reconnected the connector, live data returned to normal, and heating function restored.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Qin Pro DM: Front compartment wiring harness wear caused an intermittent open circuit.

2018 Qin Pro DM. Intermittent DTC B122013 with no cabin heating when the fault occurred. Inspection found the fault only appeared over bumps. Traced the wiring harness from the PTC controller to the sensor and found it had worn through at the firewall clip from prolonged vibration, leaving only a few copper strands connected; the circuit broke completely on rough roads. Repaired the harness by cutting out the damaged section, soldering in an extension, and protecting it with high-temperature tape and corrugated conduit. Adjusted the routing to avoid contact with sharp edges. Fault resolved.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Sensor connector corroded from water ingress after wading.

A 2019 Qin Pro DM lit the cooling system warning light the day after wading through deep floodwater. Pulling codes gave B122013. Inside the right-side radiator temperature sensor connector, I found water stains, green copper corrosion, and infinite resistance across the terminals. Water had wicked up the harness by capillary action during the water crossing, oxidizing the contacts and causing an open circuit. I replaced the sensor connector (with pigtail), dried the original harness and treated it with corrosion protection, applied conductive grease, and reconnected. Fault cleared.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Connector not reseated after repair caused false fault code

After front collision repairs, the vehicle logged DTC B122013. Inspection found that after replacing the front compartment wiring harness, the technician had swapped the right-side radiator temperature sensor connector with a nearby two-pin connector (front compartment temperature sensor). They plugged in, but the mismatched pin configuration caused an open circuit. Correcting the connections cleared the fault code and restored normal operation. During repairs, pay attention to the error-proof design of similar connectors to prevent mix-ups.
Data confidence: Official This information is for reference only. Always consult a qualified technician for diagnosis and repair. Do not attempt high-voltage system repairs yourself. Sources: [1]