B2A7914

This DTC indicates a short to ground or open circuit fault in the drive motor circuit of the 4-Way Heater Core Valve — Atto 3

Thermal Management System

This DTC indicates a short to ground or open circuit fault in the drive motor circuit of the 4-Way Heater Core Valve.

The 4-way valve is a core actuator in the BYD thermal management system.

It switches the coolant flow path to distribute heat among the heater core (PTC heating circuit), motor cooling circuit, and battery pack thermal management circuit.

Damaged insulation in the motor winding or power supply wiring causes a short to ground, leaking abnormal current to the vehicle body ground.

An internal motor break, a broken wiring harness, or a loose connector causes an open circuit, resulting in a loss of continuity.

This fault causes the valve to stick in its current position, preventing coolant path switching based on thermal management demands.

This failure leads to a loss of cabin heating, an inability to heat the battery, or insufficient motor cooling.

Severe cases trigger thermal management system protective power limiting (limp mode), and extreme cases cause overheating damage to the motor or battery.

5
Cases Logged
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Worn front compartment wiring harness on Qin EV causing intermittent short to ground

At 80,000 km, a 2019 Qin EV displayed an intermittent thermal management system warning. Scanner read DTC B2A7914; freeze frame showed the fault occurred on rough roads. Inspection found the 4-way water valve motor harness had chafed through at the left front compartment/firewall interference point, exposing copper wires touching the chassis. Repaired the harness with high-temperature corrugated tubing and fleece tape for double protection, rerouted to eliminate interference, and cleared the fault.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Internal motor in four-way water valve burned out, causing open circuit

No cabin heat; DTC B2A7914 stored. Measured infinite resistance (open circuit) at the water valve motor connector. Disassembled the valve and found the stepper motor windings burned black, with heavy scale deposits seizing the valve spool. Cause: Coolant not replaced for an extended period caused valve seizure; the motor stalled, drawing excessive current until it burned out. Replaced the four-way water valve assembly, thoroughly flushed the cooling system, and replaced the coolant. Fixed.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Connector seal perished, causing water ingress and corrosion

Fault appeared after driving through water in the southern region. Inspection found green copper corrosion inside the water valve motor connector with a weak short between pins (approx. 200Ω to ground). Cause: connector seal aging allowed water ingress. Cleaned the connector with electronic cleaner, blow-dried it, applied conductive grease, and replaced the waterproof seal ring and housing. Fault cleared. Recommend inspecting other connectors from the same batch.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

TMCU drive module false short circuit detection

Replaced water valve; fault persisted. New water valve resistance normal (25Ω), but connector still showed short to ground. Further measurement found 0.5Ω to ground at thermal management controller output. Internal H-bridge driver chip shorted. Fix: Replaced thermal management controller assembly (located in front compartment distribution box), programmed and matched. Fault resolved. Root cause: internal power component quality issue.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Aftermarket modification overloaded and burned out wiring

Owner fitted a parking heater without authorisation, improperly tapping into the water valve motor supply circuit. This overloaded the factory wiring, causing the water valve motor supply cable to overheat and melt its insulation, shorting to chassis. Scan tool displayed DTC B2A7914 with blown fuse. Repair: Removed the unauthorised wiring, repaired the factory harness (replaced the complete motor harness), replaced the 4-way water valve (motor damaged). Advised owner not to modify high-voltage or thermal management systems without authorisation.
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.