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AC Making Strange Noises
in McKinney, TX

An AC unit that starts making a noise it didn't used to make is telling you something is wrong. McKinney systems run almost year-round, and that constant use wears on motors, fan blades, and belts. Ignoring a new noise usually means a small repair turns into a larger one.

Quick Answer

Unusual noises from an AC unit usually mean a mechanical part is loose, worn, or failing. In McKinney, where systems run hard for 7 or 8 months a year, motors and fan blades wear out faster than they do in cooler climates. The noise tells you something is wrong before it breaks completely. Call (361) 317-6400 and describe what you hear so a tech can narrow it down before it turns into a bigger repair.

AC Making Strange Noises in McKinney

Telltale Signs

Warning Signs to Watch For

  • A loud banging or clanking sound when the outdoor unit starts up
  • A high-pitched squealing or screeching from the indoor air handler
  • A rattling sound from the outdoor unit while it's running
  • A grinding noise that gets louder over several days
  • The unit makes a loud noise and then shuts itself off

Root Causes

What Causes AC Making Strange Noises?

1

Failing Blower Motor Bearings

The blower motor inside your air handler pushes conditioned air through your ducts. The bearings that let it spin smoothly wear out over time, especially in systems that run 10 or more hours a day through a McKinney summer. A squealing or grinding sound from the air handler is usually the bearing telling you it's close to seizing.

The Fix

Blower Motor Replacement

A tech removes the old motor and installs a new one matched to the unit. A seized motor can also burn out the control board, so catching it at the squealing stage saves more than just the motor.

2

Loose or Broken Fan Blade

The fan blade on the outdoor condenser unit can crack or come loose after years of heat and vibration. In McKinney, hailstorms can chip or crack a blade without you noticing right away. A cracked blade wobbles and causes a banging or rattling sound, and an unbalanced blade puts stress on the motor shaft.

The Fix

Fan Blade Replacement

The damaged blade is replaced with one that matches the manufacturer's specifications. The tech also checks the motor shaft and mounts to make sure the wobble didn't cause any other damage.

3

Loose Panels or Hardware

Sheet metal panels on the outdoor unit are held in place with screws that loosen over years of vibration. Rattling that happens only while the unit runs and stops when it shuts off is almost always a loose panel. This is a minor issue but rattling panels can hide the sound of a more serious problem underneath.

The Fix

Panel Tightening and Hardware Inspection

A tech tightens or replaces loose screws and checks all panels for damage. It's a quick fix, but a tech should also look over the unit while they're there to make sure nothing else is loose or worn.

Self-Diagnosis

Which Cause Applies to You?

Check the signs you're observing to narrow down the likely root cause before your inspection.

What You're Seeing Failing Blower Motor Bearings Loose or Broken Fan Blade Loose Panels or Hardware
Squealing or grinding from the indoor air handler
Banging sound when outdoor unit starts up
Rattling that stops when unit shuts off
Noise gets progressively louder over days
Unit shuts itself off after making a loud noise
Noise is worse after a recent hailstorm