B122A13

DTC B122A13 indicates an open circuit fault in the thermal management system coolant temperature sensor circuit — Seal 6 EV

Thermal Management System

DTC B122A13 indicates an open circuit fault in the thermal management system coolant temperature sensor circuit.

In models such as the BYD Qin EV300, this sensor typically mounts in the PTC (Positive Temperature Coefficient) water heater or the battery thermal management circuit.

It monitors coolant temperature to control heating power and battery thermal management strategies.

An open circuit means the ECU detects a continuously high sensor signal voltage (typically near the 5V reference voltage) and cannot acquire the actual temperature signal.

This fault forces the PTC heater into protection mode and halts operation, resulting in no warm air in the cabin.

It may also affect the battery preheating function, restricting charging speed or preventing charging in low-temperature environments.

In severe cases, the vehicle may trigger a thermal management system fault and enter limp mode.

5
Cases Logged
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

BYD Qin EV300 PTC heater inlet sensor open circuit causing no heating

Vehicle came in with no heating and the thermal management system warning light on. Retrieved DTC B122A13. Live data showed PTC inlet temperature at -40°C (out of range low). Measured infinite resistance at the PTC heater inlet temperature sensor, confirming an internal open circuit. Since the sensor is integrated in the PTC water heater assembly, replaced the assembly. Fault cleared, heating returned to normal.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Wiring harness chafed through at the firewall penetration, causing an intermittent open circuit.

The vehicle intermittently set DTC B122A13 on rough roads but operated normally on smooth surfaces. During a shake test, we found the firewall wiring harness clip had worked loose, allowing the harness to chafe against the metal panel edge. This wore through the insulation and partially fractured the copper cores, creating an intermittent high-resistance connection. We repaired the harness, rerouted the wiring, fitted a protective sleeve, and secured the clip. The fault has not returned.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Water ingress corroded the connector, causing poor contact.

Drove after rain and developed a fault. Scan tool read DTC B122A13. Found the coolant temperature sensor connector in the engine bay had water residue inside. Oxidised and blackened pins caused high contact resistance, leading the ECU to misdiagnose an open circuit. Cleaned the connector with electrical contact cleaner, sanded the pins with fine sandpaper, applied conductive paste, and sealed the connection against water. Fault resolved.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

Open circuit in battery cooling circuit temperature sensor limits charging power.

During fast charging, power was only 20kW (normal 60kW) and the instrument cluster displayed a charging system fault. Read multiple thermal management DTCs, including B122A13 (battery coolant temperature sensor). Measured the battery pack coolant inlet temperature sensor and found an open circuit. This prevented the BMS from accurately determining battery temperature, so it limited charging current. Replaced the battery coolant temperature sensor and charging power returned to normal.
BYD DTC AI AnalysisFrom Chinese market (translated)

False positive due to internal circuit fault in AC controller

Replaced the coolant temperature sensor, but DTC B122A13 persisted. Checked wiring harness continuity and power supply—both normal. Measured voltage from sensor signal wire to ground: 5V (normal should be a varying voltage). Suspected an internal signal acquisition circuit fault in the HVAC controller (thermal management controller). Replaced the HVAC controller and programmed the new unit. The DTC cleared and live data returned to normal.
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.