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DTC Structure

Like all digital signals, DTCs are sent to the scan tool as a series of 1s and 0s. Each DTC is made up of 2 data bytes, each consisting of 8 bits that can be set to 1 or 0. In order to display the DTCs in the conventional format, the data is decoded by the scan tool to display each set of 4 bits as a hexadecimal number (0 to F). For example, P0420 Catalyst System Efficiency Below Threshold (Bank 1).

All ISO 14229 DTCs are 4 bytes long instead of 3 or 2 bytes long. Additionally, the status byte for ISO 14229 DTCs is defined differently than the status byte for previous applications with 3 byte DTCs.

For example, P0110:1C-AF means the IAT sensor circuit voltage is out of range. The base DTC, P0110, means IAT sensor circuit, while the failure type byte 1C means circuit voltage out of range. This DTC structure was designed to allow manufacturers to more precisely identify different kinds of faults without always having to define new DTC numbers.

The PCM does not use failure type bytes and always sends a failure type byte of 00 (no sub type information). This is because OBD II regulations require manufacturers to use 2 byte DTCs for generic scan tool communications. Additionally, the OBD II regulations require the 2 byte DTCs to be very specific, so there is no additional information that the failure type byte could provide.

A list of failure type bytes is defined by SAE J2012 but is not described here because the PCM does not use the failure type byte.

For DTCs that illuminate the MIL, a confirmed DTC means the PCM has stored a DTC and has illuminated the MIL. If the fault has corrected itself, the MIL may no longer be illuminated but the DTC still shows a confirmed status for 40 warm up cycles at which time the DTC is erased.

For DTCs that do not illuminate the MIL, a confirmed DTC means the PCM has stored a DTC. If the fault has corrected itself, the DTC still shows a confirmed status for 40 warm up cycles at which time the DTC is erased.