B123698

DTC B123698 indicates a range/performance fault in the position sensor circuit of the driver-side (left) Temperature Blend Door Actuator — Seal U

Thermal Management System

DTC B123698 indicates a range/performance fault in the position sensor circuit of the driver-side (left) Temperature Blend Door Actuator.

This actuator sits inside the HVAC assembly and drives the blend door to adjust the hot/cold air mix ratio at the left air outlet (0% = full cold, 100% = full hot).

The HVAC controller sets this DTC when it detects via the LIN bus or analog signal that the deviation between the actual actuator position and the target command exceeds the threshold (typically >10%), or the position sensor feedback voltage remains outside the normal range (0.5-4.5V) for a specified duration.

This fault causes left-side temperature adjustment failure, locks the temperature at a single setting, produces abnormal gear slipping noise, or forces the HVAC system into protection mode.

Note: Early service data may incorrectly label this as a coolant temperature fault.

Current technical definitions and repair practices confirm a blend door actuator control circuit fault.

5
Cases Logged
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Stuck blend door actuator caused loss of temperature control in Qin Plus DM-i

2021 Qin Plus DM-i, 32,000 km. The left-side vent temperature would not adjust and constantly blew ambient air. Connected VDS2000 and read the live data: the left temperature blend door actual position read 255 (abnormal value), while the target position was normal. Disassembled the assembly and found the actuator linkage mechanism jammed with high resistance when moved manually. Measured the position sensor signal wire voltage and found no change, confirming the potentiometer had failed. Replaced the left temperature blend door actuator assembly (HAC-8107010A) and performed blend door calibration. Temperature control returned to normal.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Song Pro DM actuator gear wear noise

2020 BYD Song Pro DM, 58,000 km. Clicking noise from behind the dashboard followed by automatic climate control failure, temperature stuck on max heat. Read DTCs B123698 and B123700. Disassembled the dash and found the left blend door actuator's internal plastic gears worn and slipping, causing the motor to freewheel and actual position to deviate significantly from target. Replaced the actuator (HAD-8107010), applied grease, performed door position learning, cleared the fault.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Tang DM LIN bus intermittent poor contact fault

2019 Tang DM, 71,000 km. Intermittent air conditioning fault light, DTC B123698 recurring every 3–5 days, 5-second delay in left-side temperature adjustment. Measured LIN bus voltage dropping to 2–3 V during fault events (normal 7–11 V). Found loose locking tab and oxidised pins on actuator connector above passenger footwell. Cleaned oxidation, applied conductive grease, and secured the connector. LIN communication restored to stable; no recurrence after two weeks of monitoring.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Han EV software calibration lost after OTA update

2020 Han EV with 12,000 km on the clock. After an OTA head unit update, the left side had no warm air (winter), while the right side worked normally. Pulled DTC B123698, but the actuator showed no external damage and moved smoothly by hand. Swapped left and right actuators; the fault code transferred with the actuator, proving the hardware was sound. Used VDS2000 to run 'air door position learning/initialisation', deleted the old calibration, executed a full-stroke scan, and stored new data. Independent left-right temperature adjustment returned to normal.
Original source ↗
BYD DTC AI Analysis

e5 rideshare actuator short circuit due to water ingress

2018 BYD e5 (ride-share vehicle), 120,000 km. Air conditioning stuck in full heat mode, cutting summer range by 40%. Retrieved DTCs B123698 and B123699 (circuit high input). Measured a short to ground on the position sensor signal wire. Disassembled the actuator and found the internal PCB corroded by moisture from a wet carpet. Replaced the left-hand temperature blend door actuator, cleared a blocked evaporator drain, dried out the wiring loom, and recalibrated the system. Temperature control range returned to normal.
Original source ↗
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.