This DTC indicates a short to ground in the driver-side face vent (FACE mode) temperature sensor signal circuit — Seal 6 EV
This DTC indicates a short to ground in the driver-side face vent (FACE mode) temperature sensor signal circuit.
The sensor is an NTC (negative temperature coefficient) thermistor.
During normal operation, it sends a 0.5-4.5V analog voltage signal to the air conditioning control unit (ACU) to indicate the vent outlet temperature.
When the ACU detects the signal voltage remains below 0.1V (logic low threshold) for longer than the set time (typically 200-500ms), it determines a short to ground.
This fault causes the ACU to enter Limp Home Mode, disables independent dual-zone temperature control, and may lock the driver-side temperature flap in the full cold or full hot position, severely affecting air conditioning comfort.
In extreme cases, continuous full-load compressor operation affects overall vehicle energy consumption.
- 1Internal thermistor breakdown or packaging failure within the temperature sensor causes the signal terminal to short to the housing/shielding layer.
- 2Retaining clips or sharp metal bracket edges chafed the internal dashboard wiring harness during removal and installation, damaging the insulation and causing the signal wire (usually the cathode) to contact vehicle body ground.
- 3Seal failure at the connector between the air conditioning controller and the sensor (usually located on the evaporator housing or instrument panel crossmember). Water ingress causes a short circuit between terminals or a short to the housing.
- 4A shorted sampling resistor or protection diode in the internal signal acquisition circuit of the air conditioning control unit (ACU) pulls the signal line low.
- 5Improper wiring harness routing during repair caused the instrument panel frame to pinch the harness, resulting in an intermittent short to ground.
- 1Use VDS2000 or the BYD dedicated diagnostic tool to read complete DTCs and freeze frame data. Record the ambient temperature, air outlet temperature setpoint, and actual feedback value when the fault occurred. Confirm if B2A5811 is a current fault (Present).
- 2Remove the trim panel below the driver's side dashboard and locate the face outlet air temperature sensor (usually located on the evaporator housing outlet air duct, with a white or grey 2-pin connector). Visually inspect the connector for looseness, water ingress, or burn marks.
- 3Disconnect the sensor connector and use a multimeter to measure the resistance between the two terminals on the sensor side. At 25°C ambient temperature, the resistance must be 1.6–1.8 kΩ (refer to the temperature-resistance curve table in the vehicle repair manual for details). If the resistance is close to 0 Ω, replace the sensor.
- 4Keep the sensor connector disconnected. Measure the resistance between the signal wire (SIG) on the wiring harness side and body ground. Normal resistance is infinity (OL). If the resistance is less than 1 Ω, a short to ground exists. Inspect the wiring for damage, focusing on the edges of the dashboard metal bracket and the wiring harness retaining clips.
- 5Measure the signal wire voltage on the wiring harness side: With the ignition switch ON and the A/C ON, the ACU should supply a 5V reference voltage. If the voltage is 0V and resistance to ground is normal, check the ACU connector. If the voltage is normal but the fault code sets after connecting the sensor, confirm an internal short circuit in the sensor.
- 6If both the wiring harness and sensor are normal, measure circuit continuity and insulation between the corresponding ACU pin and the sensor connector. If necessary, use a jumper wire to verify the wiring harness.
- 7After replacing the faulty component (sensor) or repairing the wiring harness, clear the DTC and perform the air conditioning system self-learning procedure (such as air flap initialization). Verify the air outlet temperature changes and data stream feedback are normal at different temperature settings (LO-HI).
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