B110F

DTC B110F indicates an actuator circuit failure in the solenoid valve (switching valve) inside the PM2 — Seal 6 EV

Thermal Management System

DTC B110F indicates an actuator circuit failure in the solenoid valve (switching valve) inside the PM2.5 air quality detection module.

This solenoid valve controls the physical switching of the sampling air passage to select the channel for in-cabin or outside air sampling.

The air conditioning controller (ACU) triggers this code if it issues a switching command but fails to detect the solenoid valve current feedback or position confirmation signal (such as Hall sensor feedback), or if it detects a coil short or open circuit.

This failure prevents the system from accurately comparing the PM2.5 concentration difference between the cabin and outside air, disables Auto Clean mode, and may force the air conditioning system into a protective recirculation mode.

4
Cases Logged
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Song MAX DM solenoid valve coil open circuit caused air conditioning auto mode failure

When the vehicle arrived at the workshop, the dashboard displayed 'Air Quality System Fault'. The air conditioning had been stuck in recirculation mode for a long time and could not switch automatically. I measured the resistance between pins 3-4 of the PM2.5 module solenoid valve with a multimeter; the reading showed infinite resistance (normal: 45Ω). Disassembly revealed oxidised dry solder joints inside the coil. I replaced the PM2.5 sensor assembly (part number: HA-8121400). The fault was resolved, and Auto mode returned to normal, allowing automatic switching to fresh air mode for purification.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Song MAX petrol: valve spool sticking causes intermittent DTCs

The owner reported intermittent air conditioning odor and a dashboard warning. The scan tool showed B110F as an intermittent fault. During disassembly, I found significant dust and cotton lint accumulated on the solenoid valve spool guide rail (the owner frequently drives through textile industrial areas), causing excessive resistance in armature movement. The controller detected an abnormal drive current waveform with peak current continuously exceeding 800mA. After cleaning the valve spool with electronic cleaner and applying silicone-based grease, the current waveform returned to normal and the fault code cleared. I advised the owner to replace the cabin air filter regularly (CN95 grade).
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Dashboard wiring harness chafing caused intermittent power to the solenoid.

After driving over rough roads, the warning light came on. Checked the PM2.5 module solenoid valve supply voltage, which was only 3.2V and unstable. Traced the wiring harness along the dashboard frame and found the body harness rubbing against a metal bracket. The insulation had worn through, causing partial fracture of the copper strands and a poor connection with about 15Ω resistance. Repaired the harness by soldering and sealing with heat shrink tubing, then rerouted and secured it, adding corrugated tubing and extra cable tie mounting points. This completely resolved the fault.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Air conditioning controller driver chip failure caused multiple system faults

Both B110F (PM2.5 solenoid valve) and B2A2F (recirculation motor) DTCs were present. The solenoid valve resistance and voltage measured normal individually, but the active test produced no current output. Removing and disassembling the climate control module revealed the solenoid valve driver chip (L99MC6 or similar H-bridge type) had overheated and burned, with scorch marks on the surface. Replaced the climate control module assembly (online immobiliser matching and configuration coding required). This resolved the fault. Root cause: a previously installed non-genuine dashcam; when splicing into the power supply, the installer accidentally touched the climate control wiring, causing a voltage surge.
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.