B2A5913

This DTC indicates an open circuit in the signal circuit of the driver-side footwell air outlet temperature sensor (NTC negative temperature coefficient thermistor) — Atto 8

Thermal Management System

This DTC indicates an open circuit in the signal circuit of the driver-side footwell air outlet temperature sensor (NTC negative temperature coefficient thermistor).

In BYD dual-zone/multi-zone automatic air conditioning systems, this sensor provides real-time footwell air outlet temperature feedback to the air conditioning controller (integrated into the right domain controller) for closed-loop temperature control.

An internal open circuit in the sensor, an open circuit in the wiring harness, or poor connector contact causes the controller to detect a signal voltage outside the valid range (typically reading -40°C or a fixed high voltage) and trigger this DTC.

This fault disables driver-side temperature control and may force the compressor into protection mode.

In extreme cases, it disrupts the coordinated operation of the battery thermal management system (on models with coupled air conditioning and battery cooling circuits).

5
Cases Logged
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Bent pin in G86 connector causing intermittent open circuit

Vehicle came in reporting intermittent AC not cooling. Scanner showed DTCs B2A5913 and B2A5813 both present. Data stream showed driver-side face-level and footwell temperatures stuck at -40°C. Inspection of the right domain controller G86(G) connector revealed pin 27 (temperature sensor signal) bent and inserted into terminal 28, causing poor contact. Prior dashboard repair work caused this improper connector fitting. Reseated pin 27 to the correct position. Data stream returned to normal and the fault resolved.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Sensor unit aging caused internal open circuit

A 2018 BYD Qin Pro DM at 85,000 km logged DTC B2A5913 in the climate control system; no warm air from the driver's footwell vent. Measured 5V reference at the sensor connector (normal), but the sensor body showed infinite resistance (open). Disassembled the sensor and found the internal NTC thermistor solder joint cracked from long-term vibration and thermal cycling. Replaced the driver's footwell temperature sensor; resistance returned to 4.8kΩ at 25°C, the fault code cleared and dual-zone climate control accuracy returned to normal.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Screw pinched dashboard wiring harness, causing open circuit

The vehicle set DTC B2A5913 after dashboard removal and refitting during CarPlay module installation. Inspection found a mounting screw had crushed the wiring harness behind the HVAC assembly. The copper conductor of the temperature sensor signal wire had fractured while the insulation remained intact, creating a hidden break. The fault code appeared intermittently when gently pulling the harness. Replaced the damaged harness section, rerouted the wiring to specification, and added protective corrugated tubing to prevent direct contact between the harness and rigid frame, eliminating the fault.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Loose sensor connector causing poor contact

2019 Song MAX: AC malfunction after routine servicing. Found the driver's footwell temperature sensor connector not fully locked—relying on terminal friction alone and causing signal dropouts over bumps. The sensor sits at the bottom of the HVAC housing above the accelerator pedal in a tight space; the connector likely worked loose during the previous cabin filter check. Reinserted the plug, confirmed the locking tab clicked into place, and cleared the fault codes. Issue did not recur.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Right domain controller internal sampling circuit fault

A 2019 Qin EV repeatedly logged DTC B2A5913. Replaced the sensor and wiring harness; the fault persisted. Measured 5V at terminal G86-27 to ground (normal is 0.5-4.5V varying with temperature), indicating an open internal pull-down resistor or damaged ADC port in the controller. Replaced the right Body Domain Controller; the temperature signal returned to normal. This hardware fault is uncommon; consider it only after ruling out wiring and sensor issues.
Data confidence: Community This information is for reference only. Always consult a qualified technician for diagnosis and repair. Do not attempt high-voltage system repairs yourself.