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4 Things Your Aircon Noise Is Telling You

Every aircon makes some noise during normal operation. The sounds worth paying attention to are the new ones — sounds the unit did not make before. Each type of noise points to a different part of the system, and knowing which is which helps you decide how quickly to act.

Why New Sounds Deserve Attention

An aircon that has been running quietly for months or years develops a baseline sound you stop noticing. When a new noise appears — a rattle, a click, a hiss — it stands out because it was not there before. That change usually means something has shifted, loosened, or started wearing inside the system.

Not every noise is urgent. Some are cosmetic and cause no harm. Others signal a fault that will get worse if ignored. The key is matching the sound to the source so you can decide whether to monitor, schedule a visit, or call for urgent help.

1. Rattling Usually Means Something Is Loose

A rattling or vibrating noise from the indoor unit often comes from a loose panel, a displaced filter, or a foreign object caught near the blower wheel. These are mechanical noises — something is vibrating against something else during operation. The sound tends to be intermittent and may change with fan speed.

On the outdoor unit, rattling can come from loose mounting screws, a displaced fan blade, or debris inside the housing. A pebble or twig that fell through the top grille can create a loud rattle that sounds alarming but is harmless once removed. If the rattle is rhythmic and matches the fan rotation speed, the fan blade itself may be off-balance.

1. Rattling usually means something is loose summary table
Sound typeCommon sourceUrgency
Rattling or vibratingLoose panel, displaced part, debrisLow — schedule a check
Clicking or tickingRelay, contactor, or expansion valveMedium — monitor pattern
Hissing or rushing airRefrigerant leak or normal flowVaries — check gas levels
Grinding or scrapingMotor bearing wearHigh — stop and call

2. Clicking Points to an Electrical or Mechanical Switch

A clicking sound that happens when the unit starts or stops is often the relay or contactor engaging. This is normal — it is the sound of a switch closing an electrical circuit. But if the clicking repeats rapidly without the compressor starting, the relay may be trying and failing to engage. That pattern usually means the contactor is worn or the capacitor cannot deliver enough charge to start the compressor.

A softer ticking noise during operation can come from the expansion valve adjusting refrigerant flow. On inverter units, this is part of normal modulation. On non-inverter units, a persistent tick from the indoor unit may indicate a loose component inside the housing. The location and timing of the click helps narrow it down.

3. Hissing Can Be Normal or Can Signal a Refrigerant Leak

A brief hiss when the compressor cycles on or off is normal. Refrigerant equalizes pressure between the high and low sides of the system, and that pressure release creates a short hissing sound. It lasts a few seconds and then stops.

A continuous hiss — especially one that does not stop while the unit is running — is a different matter. It can indicate refrigerant escaping through a pinhole leak in the copper piping, a loose flare joint, or a cracked valve. If the hissing is accompanied by reduced cooling performance, a refrigerant leak is likely. A technician can confirm with a pressure test and a leak detection sweep.

4. Grinding or Scraping Means a Motor Is Wearing Out

A grinding noise is one of the sounds that should prompt you to stop the unit. It typically comes from a fan motor — either indoor or outdoor — where the bearings have worn down. Metal-on-metal contact creates a harsh scraping or grinding sound that gets worse over time.

Running the unit with a grinding motor accelerates the damage. The bearing can seize completely, which locks the motor and may trip the circuit breaker. Catching it early means the motor can be replaced before it causes secondary damage to the fan blade, housing, or electrical wiring. If you hear grinding, switch the unit off and schedule a repair visit.

When to Act and When to Wait

Rattling and cosmetic vibrations can usually wait for a scheduled service. Note when the sound happens — on startup, during operation, or at shutdown — because that detail helps the technician locate the source faster.

Clicking that repeats without the compressor starting needs attention within a few days. The unit may stop working entirely once the relay or capacitor fails completely. Hissing with reduced cooling warrants a check sooner — refrigerant loss gets worse over time and the compressor suffers when gas levels drop. Grinding is the most urgent. Stop the unit and call for a repair.

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