Aircon Flare Joint
A flare joint is the mechanical connection where the copper pipe meets the indoor or outdoor unit. If the flare weakens or loosens, refrigerant can leak slowly and cooling fades over time.
What This Part Does
A flare joint connects the copper refrigerant pipe to the unit port. It creates a sealed mechanical joint in the refrigerant path.
These joints are common at indoor and outdoor connection points. They must stay tight and properly formed to hold pressure.
If the flare joint leaks, refrigerant escapes and cooling drops over time.
How You Would Notice
The usual pattern is gradual cooling loss. The unit may improve after a top-up, then become weak again later.
Some flare-joint leaks are very slow, so the problem looks like normal aging at first. The room simply cools less each cycle.
Repeated gas top-ups without a clear leak fix are a common clue.
- Cooling fades slowly over time
- Cooling improves after top-up, then drops again
- Repeated low-gas advice without root-cause fix
It Might Not Be The Flare Joint
Leaks can also come from the service valve, indoor coil, outdoor coil, or another point in the refrigerant system.
Airflow or coil-dirt problems can also cause weak cooling without any refrigerant leak.
We confirm the exact leak point before recommending sealing work or a top-up.
How We Check
We confirm the cooling pattern and check system pressure first. Low pressure tells us a leak check is needed.
Then we inspect common leak points, including flare joints, service valves, and exposed refrigerant connections.
If signs point to a flare joint, we test that joint directly for leakage and confirm the exact location.
We only recommend gas work after the leak point is found and addressed.
What We Find And What Happens Next
Slow gas-loss cases usually end in one of four findings: flare-joint leak, valve leak, coil leak, or no leak found during that visit.
| Finding | Next Step |
|---|---|
| Flare joint leaking | Repair or remake flare joint, then recharge and retest |
| Service valve leaking | Repair service-valve leak path and retest |
| Coil leak found | Coil repair or replacement assessment |
| Leak not confirmed yet | Further leak tracing before top-up advice |
About The Repair
Flare-joint repair is often more focused than a coil repair. The main job is correcting the joint and restoring a proper seal.
The repair should be followed by pressure checks and refrigerant recharge only when needed.
A top-up without fixing the leaking joint usually leads to the same complaint again.
After Replacement
After flare-joint repair, the system should hold pressure and cooling should return to normal if no other leak points exist.
If cooling drops again, a second leak point may still be present and the system needs another leak check.
We verify cooling response and leak stability before closing the job.
When We Tell You To Wait
If cooling is still acceptable and the leak is not yet confirmed, short-term monitoring may be reasonable while symptoms are recorded.
If cooling is clearly dropping or repeated top-ups are already happening, delaying diagnosis usually adds cost.
We will tell you when a leak check should be prioritized versus when observation is still reasonable.