B122111

DTC B122111 indicates a short to ground or abnormally low signal circuit impedance in the air conditioning/thermal management system RHS Fin Temperature Sensor — Qin Plus

Thermal Management System

DTC B122111 indicates a short to ground or abnormally low signal circuit impedance in the air conditioning/thermal management system RHS Fin Temperature Sensor.

This sensor is typically an NTC (negative temperature coefficient) thermistor with a normal operating voltage range of 0.5-4.5V.

The ECU triggers this fault when the signal voltage remains below 0.1V (short-circuit threshold) for longer than a set time (typically 2-5 seconds).

In Qin EV/Qin Pro DM models, this sensor mounts on the right-hand fin of the PTC heater assembly or at the heater core outlet to monitor the heater operating temperature and prevent overheating.

A short circuit prevents the thermal management ECU from obtaining accurate temperature data.

The ECU then triggers a protection mechanism that shuts down the PTC heater and restricts the air conditioning heating function.

In extreme cases, this condition opens the high-voltage interlock and forces the vehicle into limp mode.

4
Cases Logged
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Qin Pro DM heater failure after wading

After driving through approximately 30 cm of water, the instrument cluster displayed a high coolant temperature warning and the heater produced no warm air. VDS retrieved active DTC B122111; freeze frame data showed sensor voltage 0.02V. Inspection of the front compartment found water inside the right-side PTC heater connector and oxidised pins. Procedure: Cleared the water from the connector, cleaned with WD-40 Precision Electrical Contact Cleaner, blow-dried, then applied conductive grease. Insulation resistance returned to ∞. Fault resolved, heater function restored.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Qin EV300 PTC heater internal short circuit

The customer reported vehicle judder and a powertrain fault warning when turning on the heater in winter. The scan tool displayed DTC B122111 and multiple high-voltage interlock-related faults. Inspected the right-hand radiator temperature sensor harness – no visible damage. Disconnected the sensor and measured its resistance: 0.3 Ω (should be 2–3 kΩ at 25°C). This confirmed internal sensor breakdown. Replaced the PTC heater assembly (sensor not available separately). Fault resolved. Root cause: prolonged high-temperature operation of the heater caused the thermistor to age and short-circuit.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Wiring harness chafing caused an intermittent short circuit.

While driving, the heater intermittently stopped working. DTC B122111 was stored as a history code. Inspection found no obvious short circuits and the sensor resistance measured normal. A closer look revealed the right-side heat sink temperature sensor harness had chafed against the metal edge where it passes through the firewall, wearing through the insulation and exposing copper wire. Vehicle vibration caused intermittent shorts to ground. Repair: wrapped the damaged area with electrical tape, rerouted the harness and added protective sleeving, then secured the harness to prevent contact with the body. A one-week road test showed no recurrence.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

False positive fault - ECU software issue

The 2018 Qin Pro DM had DTC B122111 from new. Sensor resistance and voltage measured normally, with no short circuit in the wiring. A service bulletin revealed a software calibration defect in the HVAC controller on some vehicles from this model year, causing false short-circuit detection at ambient temperatures below -10°C. Solution: Update the HVAC controller software to version V2.1 or later. After the update, the fault code disappeared and the heating function worked normally in low temperatures. This was a software false alarm—no hardware replacement needed.
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.