DTC B132013 is a specific fault within the thermal management/air conditioning subsystem (13) of the BYD body control system (B-Body) — Seal 6 EV
DTC B132013 is a specific fault within the thermal management/air conditioning subsystem (13) of the BYD body control system (B-Body).
The '20' designates the battery coolant temperature sensor or a related thermal management temperature sensor, and '13' indicates an open circuit.
This fault indicates the thermal management control unit (typically integrated into the Battery Management System (BMS) or air conditioning controller) detects a continuously high voltage on the coolant temperature sensor signal circuit (typically near the 5V reference voltage) and cannot obtain a valid temperature resistance signal.
As a result, the thermal management system enters fail-safe mode.
The system forcibly limits charge and discharge power, disables DC fast charging, and activates the maximum cooling strategy (high-speed fan and full-speed water pump operation).
In extreme cases, the system triggers a 'powertrain fault' and prevents the vehicle from entering the Ready state to prevent overheating damage to the battery or drive motor caused by the loss of temperature monitoring.
- 1The NTC thermistor element inside the sensor body is broken or open, causing infinite resistance (normal resistance at ambient temperature is 2kΩ-10kΩ, depending on the vehicle model's calibrated temperature curve).
- 2Loose low-voltage wiring harness connector, backed-out pins, or oxidized/corroded pins causing poor contact due to vibration or water ingress, especially at the low-voltage plug near the battery pack high-voltage connector.
- 3Physical damage to the wiring harness, including insulation aging and cracking from high front compartment temperatures, harness chafing against body sheet metal, or rodents chewing through signal wires.
- 4Sensor power supply or ground circuit fault, such as a short to ground in the 5V reference voltage circuit causing the ECU to disconnect the circuit for protection, or excessive resistance in the ground return circuit causing a false open circuit diagnosis.
- 5Internal signal acquisition circuit fault in the thermal management control unit (BMS or A/C controller), such as a burnt sampling resistor or damaged analog-to-digital converter.
- 1Use VDS or a dedicated diagnostic tool to read the DTC freeze frame data. Record the ambient temperature, battery temperature, and vehicle status when the fault occurred. Confirm whether it is a hard fault (currently present) or an intermittent fault (history code).
- 2Visually inspect the coolant temperature sensor connector at the battery pack coolant outlet, PTC heater outlet, or plate heat exchanger outlet. Confirm the connector lock is intact, secure, and shows no signs of water ingress or corrosion. If necessary, disconnect the connector and check for backed-out pins.
- 3Disconnect the sensor connector and measure the sensor resistance using a multimeter. At 25°C ambient temperature, normal resistance is approximately 10 kΩ (refer to the temperature-resistance curve table in the repair manual for specific values). If the reading is infinity (OL), replace the sensor.
- 4Leave the connector disconnected and measure the voltage at the wiring harness side: verify a 5V reference voltage (Vref) and 0V ground. The signal wire voltage should be approximately 5V (open-circuit voltage). If the voltage is abnormal, check wiring harness continuity between the sensor and the control unit, especially the sections passing through the front compartment and battery pack area.
- 5Perform continuity and insulation tests on the wiring harness: measure the signal wire resistance between the sensor connector and the control unit connector. Resistance must be less than 1Ω, and insulation resistance to ground must be greater than 10MΩ. Carefully inspect the wiring harness bend points where it passes through the firewall and the battery pack casing.
- 6Perform sensor replacement verification: Conduct a jumper test using a known-good sensor of the same model and observe if the data stream returns to normal. If normal, the original sensor is faulty.
- 7After repairing the wiring harness or replacing the sensor, clear the fault code, perform a road test (including various vehicle speeds and charging/discharging conditions), and observe the thermal management data stream to verify the temperature display changes smoothly with operating conditions, confirming complete fault resolution.
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