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            | Heat Pump Noise                                          It   is amazing how many problems faulty heating and cooling equipment can   make especially if it makes a lot of different kinds of noises! Also   amazing how many words people can use to describe them. 
 Below you can see a list of noises and sounds people usually   use to describe a noise that is coming from their furnaces, heat  pumps,  air conditioners and boilers:
 
 Back peddling, banging, booming, buzzing noise, chattering,   chirping, clacking, clanging, clicking, droning, explosion, grating,   grinding, groaning, grumbling sound, gurgling, hammering, high pitched,   high pitched whine, high pitched whistle, hissing, howling, humming,   knocking, metal hitting metal, moaning noise, out of balance washing   machine, plane engine, popping, pulsating, random, ratcheting, rattling,   roaring, rumbling, scraping, screech, screeching, siren, sputtering,   squeaky, squealing, switching, swoosh, thumping, ticking, tinny, train   like, vibration, weird, whining, whirring, whooshing, wobbling, woof   noises or sounds.
             Some people have a hard time to describe what kind of noise coming from their units, for example:Furnace is making a loud noise, awful furnace motor noise,   furnace noise reduction, gas furnace noise like a slamming door that   vibrates, heat pump making funny noise, when I turn on furnace sound   strange, our boiler makes noises through the whole house and so on!
 If you one of them, please carefully read through all lists of noises and try to find one that describes yours.
 
 Currently, on my site, I have six pages dedicated to these kinds of issues and they are all made the same way:
 At the top of the module, you can see a short list of   noises. If you click on any word from the list, which in your opinion   better describes your type of noise, the page is going to jump down and   you can read the question and the answer to that question or feedback   written by a person who asked that question in the first place.
 If you cannot find the type of noise, you are looking for or   if there are several questions with the same type of noise just scroll   down to the next module or go to the next page.
 
 List of the pages:
 
 Furnace/Air Handler Noise
 Furnace/Air Handler Noise 2
 Furnace/Air Handler Noise 3
 Heat Pump Noise
 Heat Pump Noise 2
 Boiler Noise
 Boiler Noise 2
 Boiler Noise 3
 Air Conditioner Noise
               
 Is it time to replace your heat pump? Fill out a Repair or Replace Report Card     
 List of Noises 1:
 Back peddling noise
 Buzzing noise 1
 Metal hitting metal type sound
 Vibration noise 1
 Grinding noise
 Buzzing Noise 2
 Clicking Noise 1
 Loud Noise
 If you have a "Scroll" type compressor, it can make a loud "back peddling" type of noise on shutdown and on start-up sometimes sound like an "out of balance washing machine".  
 If you are hear a buzzing noise   from the outdoor unit when it's not even running. This is usually the   reversing valve solenoid coil. It's low voltage (24 volts) so it isn't   really wasting energy and sometimes they can be heard. 
 If you are hearing a very loud "metal hitting metal type sound",   the fan blade could be hitting something: possibly ice, or a wire, or   tubing. Take a look and shut the unit off immediately. This almost   always ruins the fan blades and possibly the motor as well. If a piece   of copper tubing shifted and is being hit by the blades, they could put a   hole in it causing the Freon to leak out.  
 If you have an A/C unit that is grinding on   startup, then the refrigerant lines that rise to a vertical height of   more than what is stated in the installation manual will cause this. Compressor on ground and air handler in attic of two story house can exceed the limit.
 Will sound like gravel churning for a few seconds. They sell a kit I think to solve this.
 This may also be a simple rain shield on the fan motor. Refrigerant migration could be a factor also.
 Evaporator up, condenser   down: If the refrigerant metering device is other than a TXV it may   flood the compressor as it allows the liquid refrigerant to pass through   the metering device rapidly until equalized. Creating a "Pump down" or just a "shut down" configuration   by installing a solenoid valve in the liquid line will correct this.   However, a hard start kit may be needed if the compressor doesn't have a   start capacitor as the compressor must start against the head pressure   of the refrigerant caused by the elevated AHU.
 Excessive refrigerant   charge (due to system design) - the amount of refrigerant in a system   must be kept to a minimum. Arbitrarily installing over sized lines may   cause this. These flooding conditions are more prone in over sized   refrigerant circuits.  No crankcase heater in a   scroll compressor or reciprocal compressor where slugging is occurring.   Manufacturer thinks the scroll is tuff and doesn't need an accumulator,   start capacitor or crank heater. Refrigerant has infinity for oil and   during shut down it will migrate to the crankcase of the compressor. At   start up the refrigerant (and the oil) are sucked up through the   compressor. It makes a noise!  
                                                                                                                                                     If you have a 5 years old  Goodman condenser unit and you noticed an intermittent buzzing   noise coming from its fuse panel. When it first turns on for heating   and thereafter at an interval of every 60 seconds it makes an electrical   buzzing noise at the condenser unit and this causes a similar noise at   its fuse panel. Then it could be your compressor trying to start but  not  being able to do so. It shouldn’t happen that often but in cold  temp  the overload protector may cycle that quickly. So your compressor  should  be replaced. 
 If there is the vibration   noise, then in order to eliminate it sometimes it is just a matter of   installing rubber isolation pads under the unit. Sometimes the   refrigerant piping is strapped too tightly to the joists or it is in the   unit itself and cannot be eliminated. 
 If your heat pump has started to make a clicking   noise when it is turned off. The clicking is about one second apart  and  is continuous. Then the problem could be the "Safe-T switch" which   monitors the drainage reservoir to the outside. You can bypass the   switch, and the heat pump should turn on by itself. Replace the switch.     If your heat pump making loud noise at times and inside breaker keeps cutting off
 after the unit was on for a short time. If you flip the   breaker back on, the outside unit comes on, and makes the loud noise at   start up, but then after a short time, the breaker shuts off, and   everything quits again. Then this sounds like the compressor unit or   even the fan motor is going bad, but nonetheless call a heating service   man and has it checked. The breaker is tripping because something is   overloading or it has a short or something in the unit itself.
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            | List of Noises 2:
 Clicking noise 2Rumbling noise
 Squealing noise
 Whooshing sound
 Whining noise 2
 Clacking noise
 Train like noise
 Clicking noise 3
 Whining noise 3
 Jack hammer sound
 If your Carrier system in the heat mode makes a periodic clicking noise  that appears to be coming from a solenoid in the outside unit. It will  click every half second or so for about ten minutes and will stop when  the thermostat shuts off the compressor. It doesn’t click all the time  and for the most part, it seems to happen rarely. Then what you are  hearing is the reversing valve trying to go into defrost mode.It  could be the defrost board, the reversing valve, loose wiring from the  thermostat to the heat pump, bad or weakly energized solenoid coil, or a  combo of above. Also it could be a defrost sensor going to the bad  sending mixed signals to the defrost board, the thermostat, air handler  control board.
 The defrost  board is most likely the culprit. It has two relays on it that tells  the heat pump, along with the other electronics, what to do among them  is to tell the heat pump to go into defrost mode.The sensor on the  heat pump coil or a timer built electronically on the board sends a  signal to the blower on the heat pump to cut off and to reverse the  valve basically putting it into A/C mode, also it tells the air handler  to turn on the aux/emergency heat strips so you won't lose your comfort  level in the home. After everybody is satisfied (timer or sensor) it  goes back into normal heat mode, reverse valve, blower comes back on,  heat strips cut-off, everything back to normal. By the way, at times  when it is in defrost mode, you may see something that looks like smoke  rising out of the top of the heat pump while it sits there and hums,  this is normal. What’s happening is the heat from the compressor and  coils create steam.
 
 If you have a new Lennox two speed heat pump installed and it makes loud rumbling  noise after on for 5 min and a loud tone is heard which I located at  furnace plenum, then the most common noise problems on new heat pumps  are overcharged. The installers may not have adjusted the refrigerant  correctly and if there is too much you will definitely get a noise. This  noise could be a pulsation or high pressure sound.  
 If your 8 years old outside unit started to make a loud squealing noise, then it's more than likely the outdoor fan motor failing. 
 In  the winter heat pumps that have reversing valves that reverse the flow  of refrigerant between the heating and cooling modes and whenever the  heat pump goes into the defrost mode, this valve shifts. Along with that  is a "whooshing  sound" which usually lasts for a couple of seconds. After that, the  compressor sometimes sounds much louder than usual, almost a "tinny  sound". After shutdown the Freon pressures equalize, during this period  sometimes sounds are heard but this is normal. 
 If you have a Carrier heat pump mounted in the attic and whenever Aux mode kicks in, you can hear a high-pitched whine,  kind of like a muted dentist drill. When it exits Aux mode, you hear a  whooshing noise, like from a pressure relief valve. After that  everything sounds normal. The whine appears to be coming from the  condenser outside and the whooshing noise coming from the attic. Then  the whooshing is when the four-way valve opens and lets the Freon turn  around in the pipe from heat to cool. You could be a little low on  Freon. The whine outside is the condenser fan. 
 If your Carrier heat pump unit is making a clacking noise outside and a whistle inside and it's also making a very slight whistling/whining  noise at the inside unit that is continuous whenever the unit is on.  The clacking noise is intermittent and appears to be the worst when the  unit is shutting off or even after it is off it will clack for a minute  or so. Then when you have a heat pump that means that the whistling  noise is coming from the reversing valve and the clacking noise is the  reversing valve relay, unless you got a check valve that may be going  bad. Anyways, if everything is working well, then leave it the way it  is. What you want to do is cut the power off and start tightening all  the electrical connections. If you see any of the connector's insulation  kind a burned out, then is time to replace that connector. Check the  contactor as well; make a visual inspection to see if your contacts are  not worn out. Check all connections coming from the t-stat wire to the  unit. If you see any wire nuts, then remove the wire nuts and peel new  wire and put a new wire nut on it. If is making false contact that means  that is turning on and off the reversing valve continuously, and that  could be the problem too. Then put the cover on again and put the power  back on. If that didn't do it, may be your reversing valve may be going  bad.
 If you have an Amana 3 ton, 16 seer communicating heat pump has performing good but it's too loud. Jack hammer sound,  whooshing sound along with moose call that last 30 to 45 sec. Then to  your knowledge recently Amana has come up with a "quiet defrost"  feature. Contact your dealer or Amana customer service and see if this  feature can be added to your unit. It shuts down the compressor for a  short time and lets the Freon equalize to eliminate the "whoosh" sound  at defrost. It’s possible that the "clattering" sound is also part of  the reversing valve/defrost noise. Also make sure your installer has the  defrost interval set properly.
 You can use the 90 minute setting. Otherwise the outside unit is going to check for defrost too often.
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            | List of Noises 3:
 Knocking noise 1Whooshing noise 2
 Buzzing noise3
 Hammering noise
 Vibration noise 2
 Gurgling noise
 Screeching noise
 Noise comparison
 Buzzing noise 4
 Knocking noise 2
 Noise and vibration 3
 
 If your Trane duel-fuel heat pump’s fan is making a knocking   noise and not spinning, then you may be hearing the defrost on the  heat  pump kick in. A heat pump uses the outdoor air to produce heat for   inside so when it gets close to freezing or below the copper starts to   frost because of the extreme heat difference in the air and what is in   the lines so it goes into what is called a defrost cycle. There is a   small sensor in the unit that senses the frost starting to build up so   it shuts down the fan and the compressor. The heat pump goes into a   defrost cycle it sounds like a fridge humming   x1000. This heat the lines to thaw them and when the sensor feels it  is  good it turn the fan back on and the unit continues heating. When  the  fan starts back up steam will sometimes roll out of the unit and it   makes a gushing   sound like a train starting up to roll down the tracks. Now you have   duel fuel so there should be an outdoor sensor that is set to around 40   degrees or so that tells the thermostat to shut off the heat pump heat   and turn on the gas furnace heat while it is this cold outside.
 
 If you have a Philco split system heat pump that was manufactured in 2000, making a strange whooshing noise   from the outside unit. It's not extremely loud or high pitched, more   like the sound of an air brake releasing. It only lasts a few seconds   then repeats a minute or two later. After that, it may not repeat for a   few hours. Then that you are hearing is the unit is going into defrost.When  a heat pump is in the heating mode it actually cools  the outside air.  To do this the outside coil gets colder than outside  temp causing the  moisture in the outside air to freeze on the coil.  when the coil temp  drops low enough it has to defrost the ice build up  so it switches to  the cooling mode (outside coil gets warm) to melt the  ice. The outside  fan also stops (to help speed the process up) and the  Aux heat comes on  (to compensate for the cooling).
 
                                                                                                                                                      If the outside  condenser unit for your heat pump is making a loud buzzing noise   and the fan was not running. The Freon supply and return lines are  both  warm. I went into the house and turned off the heat at the  thermostat.  The air handler keep running, blowing semi warm air, and  the condenser  start steaming. That means that your heat pump will  defrost in heating  mode and when it happens the outdoor fan will cut  off, the Freon will  reverse which can make an odd sound, and  steam/water will come from the  unit. If there is something wrong with  the unit the fan will never come  back on. Turn it back on and give it a  few min. and see what happens.  Also the indoor fan was running because  the t-stat was still calling for  heat and this is what controls the  units. So by turning off the outdoor  unit would not have turned the  indoor unit off. Your unit is in normal  operation. 
 If you  have a 30 yr old  General Electric unit is with 10 yr old rebuilt  compressor. Inside is a  Carrier furnace with evaporator coil that is  making a hammering   noise. The best description of the noise is that it sounds similar to   water hammer noise in plumbing. Hammering lasts 5 to 20 seconds after   compressor shut off. Then it is possible that the condenser coil is   dirty or there is a problem with the fan.To get some idea if this is so you could feel the smaller of the two lines going to the indoor coil.
 The  smaller line should be in a range of about 100* F. This  would feel like  the surrounding temp. If hotter you may have a  problem.
 If your outside coil is dirty spray it with a degreaser, and then gently power wash the coils.
 
 If you have Carrier heat pump that is making a droning   noise that goes thru the house every once in a while, and it gets  worse  the colder it gets. Then it maybe the line set is clamped to the   joists, which is why you are getting a vibration noise. Then in order to eliminate such a noise the vibration absorbers should be installed. In  addition to installing the vibration absorbers you may  also ran a metal  rod down into the ground and then tied the Freon lines  to the rod to  help divert vibration away from the house and down into  the soil.
 
 If the liquid line in a heat pump system is gurgling near the interior coil when the heat pump is in defrost or cooling mode?The  noise is audible from 3' away when the heat pump is  cooling in marginal  air conditioning weather. When the heat pump is  defrosting in 25 degree  weather, the noise is loud enough to be audible  in adjoining rooms,  through 8' of distance and a sheetrock wall. Then  it’s possible that  liquid is flashing, which would indicate low on  charge, also could be  non-condensable in the system.
 Gurgling sounds at TEV: Low evaporator  heat-loads lead to  reduced liquid line mass and increased evaporator  mass could be due to  airflow problems. Eliminate low evaporator  heat-loads before looking  into adjusting the refrigerant charge. Gurgling - pulsation noises   in Liquid Line at the expansion device can be caused by low evaporator   circuit heat-loads, low charge, and/or non-condensables and moisture  in  the system. Unbalanced airflow through the various distributor  circuits  of the evaporator coil will cause the TEV to close down  refrigerant flow  starving the coil. Piston-flow-rators will make it  impossible to  properly charge the system and cooling will be greatly  compromised  unless you eliminate the cause!
 On  every Rheem condenser  cover it lists "non-condensables and or moisture"  as causes for a  gurgling or pulsating noise at the expansion device.  The entire  evaporator circuits, may not become active for various  reasons, - the  entire coil must become fully active for efficient  performance. 
 If you  have a Bryant  compressor that is regularly tripping the house panel  breaker and then  after the breaker is reset, it will run, but  periodically make a loud screeching noise. Then  it sounds like the motor. If the fan is spinning  slower then normal the  condenser will be hot to the touch. If you’re  touching it where the  motor mounts, it will be hot.
 
 From  the online  brochures, it looks like the XL20i may be the noisier of the  three (but  still referred to as being quiet), with the Carrier and  Lennox being  about the same. But maybe in real life there isn't much  difference? I'm  looking most likely at a 3-ton system. 
 Noise comparison, Trane XL20i, Carrier Infinity 21, Lennox XC21:
 Lennox XC21 is the quietest
 Infinity 21 is in the middle
 Trane XL20i is the loudest
 The Trane XL20i is almost  twice as loud and the Infinity 21 right in the middle. All three units  are virtually silent from 15ft and you can easily carry on a  conversation next to any of them without raising your voice.   
 Structureborne Sound. pdf file
 Refrigerant Piping Manual for Small Split Cooling and Heat Pump Systems. pdf file Is it time to replace your heat pump? Fill out a Repair or Replace Report Card
 
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            | List of YouTube Videos 
 01. Carrier Heat Pump Noise Problem
 02. Heat Pump Defrost
 03. Heat Pump Headaches
 04. More Noisy Goodman Heat Pumps
 05. Noisy, Loud, Squeaky, Heat Pump / Air Conditioner Trane XR1
 06. Condenser Unit Fan Noise-Solved by Replacing Fan Blade
 07. How Noisy is Air Source Heat Pump
 08. Strange Heat Pump Ticking
 09.  Trane XE 1000 XE1000 High Pitched Noise or Whine
 10. Heat Pump Problem
 11. Squealing Bryant Aero Cool AC Condenser Fan
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