This DTC indicates the 12V operating supply voltage of the thermal management system (specifically the air conditioning control unit or thermal management controller) falls below the 9V threshold — Seal 6 EV
This DTC indicates the 12V operating supply voltage of the thermal management system (specifically the air conditioning control unit or thermal management controller) falls below the 9V threshold.
In the BYD new energy architecture, the low-voltage system has a nominal voltage of 12V (normal range 10.5V-14.5V).
When the supply voltage drops below 9V, the controller’s internal microprocessor, sensor interface circuits, and power drive module fail to operate stably.
This instability can cause abnormal air conditioning compressor control signals, inaccurate electronic expansion valve actuation, insufficient battery coolant pump speed, or a protective shutdown of the PTC heater.
As a power supply fault, this condition does not directly trigger the high-voltage interlock, but it indirectly affects battery thermal management performance.
In extreme cases, it can trigger battery over-temperature power derating protection.
- 1Aged or deeply discharged 12V low-voltage battery; increased internal resistance causes a sharp voltage drop under load.
- 2DC-DC converter fault or high-voltage system malfunction, unable to convert high voltage into a stable 14V low-voltage power supply.
- 3Poor contact in the air conditioning controller/TMS module power supply wiring harness, including a loose connector, corroded pins, or an oxidized fuse holder causing a voltage drop exceeding 3V.
- 4Burnt contacts on the thermal management relay in the front compartment power distribution box, causing increased contact resistance.
- 5Fault in the A/C controller internal power supply voltage regulation circuit, such as filter capacitor leakage or a damaged buck converter chip.
- 1Connect the VDS diagnostic tool to read the freeze frame data. Confirm the specific voltage value when the fault occurred and any accompanying fault codes (such as B132317 overvoltage or U-series communication faults).
- 2Measure the low-voltage battery static voltage. If below 12.4V, charge the battery. Start the vehicle and measure the battery dynamic voltage. Normal voltage is 13.8V to 14.5V. If below 13V, check the DC-DC converter.
- 3Check thermal management-related fuses and relays (e.g., F1/15, F2/03) in the front compartment power distribution box. Measure the relay contact voltage drop. If it exceeds 0.5V, replace the relay.
- 4Disconnect the 32-pin connector from the air conditioning controller (usually on the right side of the dashboard or left side of the front compartment). Measure the voltage between the B+ pin (usually pin 1 or 32) and ground. If the voltage is normal but the fault code persists, replace the controller. If the voltage is below 9V, inspect and repair the wiring harness.
- 5Check intermediate connectors along the power supply path (e.g., connectors GJ301 and GJ302) for backed out or oxidized pins. If necessary, apply conductive adhesive or replace the wiring harness.
- 6After clearing the fault code, perform a road test and monitor the 'IG2 power supply voltage' value in the data stream. Confirm it remains above 10V while the air conditioning operates at full load.
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