Air Conditioning

How You Should Handle a Dripping AC Inside Your Home

A dripping AC can be a source of damage in your home. A central air conditioner naturally produces condensation as it cools the air. In fact, a typical central unit may generate as much as 20 gallons of condensate per day in hot, humid weather. A dripping air conditioner may result from problems in the air conditioner’s condensation drainage. Another potential leakage issue can result from ice formation on the AC evaporator coil. Here are two scenarios that might result in a dripping AC.  

Overflowing Drain Pan

  • How it works. Below the evaporator coil inside the AC's indoor air handler, a drain pan collects condensation generated when the system airflow passes through the evaporator. The pan connects to a condensate drain tube that carries water into the household drain system.  

  • What goes wrong. Algae or mold growth inside the drain pan may block the drain tube. As the air conditioner continues to generate condensation, the pan repeatedly overflows, and water damage occurs to flooring or walls inside the home.  

  • Now what? Service by a certified HVAC technician includes an inspection of condensate drainage components. If the drain line is clogged by mold or algae, the line is opened. The pan is cleaned and fungicide pills are placed in the pan to prevent recurrence. If the leakage from a dripping AC is due to a crack in the pan, a new pan will be installed.

Coil Icing

  • How it works. The cold evaporator coil condenses humidity from system airflow passing through the coil. Dry airflow cools more effectively and efficiently.

  • What goes wrong. If the AC refrigerant charge is low, the evaporator-coil temperature drops into the freezing range. Condensation turns into layers of ice that extends beyond the drip pan below. Each time the system cycles off, ice melts, and water dripping from the coil may damage the surrounding structure.

  • Now what? An HVAC technician can track down the source of low refrigerant (usually a leak), make the repair, and then restore the refrigerant charge to the proper level.  

For more information about how to handle a dripping AC, contact the cooling pros at Air Assurance.