How Do You Know If Your AC Needs Repair? Warning Signs Southlake Homeowners Shouldn't Ignore

It's 98 degrees outside, the vents are blowing, and your house still feels warm. Before you blame another Texas summer, there's a quick checklist that tells you whether your AC needs repair. Knowing the warning signs — and how urgent they are — saves you money and keeps a small issue from becoming a full system replacement.

A single ignored symptom can shave years off a cooling system that should last 15 to 20 years. We've served North Texas homes since 1975 — and Southlake is where Berkeys started. After 50 years on these streets, the same patterns show up again and again, especially in Southlake's 1990s to 2000s neighborhoods like Timarron, Bent Creek, and Cambridge Place.

Below, we walk through the nine most common AC warning signs we see in Southlake homes, what each one means, and when it's time to call a technician.

How Do You Know If Your AC Needs Repair- Berkeys Southlake Tx

How Do You Know If Your AC Needs Repair?

Your AC likely needs repair if you notice one or more of these signs:

  • Warm air coming from the vents
  • Weak airflow or uneven cooling between rooms
  • Strange noises like grinding, banging, hissing, or clicking
  • Unusual smells, especially musty or burning odors
  • Water pooling or ice forming around the indoor unit
  • Short cycling, where the unit turns on and off rapidly
  • Higher-than-normal electric bills
  • The system runs constantly but never cools the home
  • The thermostat no longer responds or matches the room temperature

If you spot two or more of these signs together, it's time to schedule a repair. Catching problems early keeps your system running longer and your home cooler through Southlake's hottest months.

Warm Air Is Coming From the Vents

Warm air blowing from your vents is the most common AC warning sign we get calls about in Southlake. It's also the one that gets worse fastest in North Texas heat.

First, check the basics. Make sure your thermostat is set to "cool," not "fan." If the setting is right and the air is still warm, something inside the system needs attention.

The most common causes we find are:

  • Low refrigerant from a leak
  • A failing compressor
  • A dirty outdoor condenser coil
  • A thermostat that isn't communicating with the unit

Each of these causes needs a different fix, so pinpointing the right one takes a professional diagnosis. Running the system while it's low on refrigerant can damage the compressor, which is one of the most expensive parts to replace.

When outdoor temps climb above 90 degrees, this one becomes a same-day call. Your home heats up fast, and larger Southlake homes with long duct runs can lose cool air quickly through any weak point in the system.

Weak Airflow or Uneven Cooling Between Rooms

Weak airflow and uneven cooling feel similar but point to different problems. One room stays comfortable while another feels stuffy, or every vent in the house blows softly.

Try this quick test. Hold a tissue up to a vent in each room. If the tissue barely moves in one spot but flutters in another, you have an airflow problem, not a cooling capacity problem.

The most common causes we see are:

  • A clogged or dirty air filter
  • A failing blower motor
  • Leaks or disconnections in the ductwork
  • Closed or blocked supply vents

Start with the air filter. A clogged filter can cut cooling efficiency by 5 to 15 percent and is the cheapest fix in the list.

Many Southlake homes run two-story floor plans with zoned systems and long attic duct runs. Over the years, North Texas clay-soil movement under the slab and heat stress in the attic can pull duct joints apart, so cool air escapes into the attic before it reaches the rooms that need it. If a filter change doesn't fix the problem within a day, it's time to have the system looked at.

Strange Noises — Grinding, Banging, Hissing, or Clicking

A healthy AC system runs with a steady, low hum. Any new sound is worth paying attention to, because different noises point to different problems.

Here's what each sound usually means:

SoundLikely CauseHow Urgent
GrindingWorn motor bearingsCall within a few days
BangingLoose or broken internal partSame-day call
HissingRefrigerant leakShut off the unit, call today
Continuous clickingFailing relay or capacitorCall within a few days
Clicking on startup onlyNormal operationNo action needed

Hissing is the one to take most seriously. It signals a refrigerant leak, which damages the compressor, drives up your power bill, and releases chemicals that shouldn't be in your home. Shut the system off and call for service.

Banging sounds mean a part has come loose inside the unit. Running the system can turn a small repair into a full component replacement, so stop the unit and schedule service the same day.

The older systems common in established Southlake and Colleyville homes often develop noise issues first, since moving parts wear down over years of heavy summer use.

Air Conditioning Repair Service Southlake Tx

Unusual Smells From the Vents or Unit

Smells coming from your AC fall into two groups: annoying and dangerous. Knowing the difference tells you how fast to act.

Here's what each smell usually means:

  • Musty or moldy — Mold or mildew in the drain pan, ductwork, or on the evaporator coil
  • Burning or hot plastic — An electrical component is overheating
  • Sweet or chemical — A refrigerant leak
  • Dirty sock smell — Bacteria buildup on the evaporator coil

Burning smells are the most serious. Shut the breaker off to the AC and call for service the same day. An overheating component can damage the system or start a fire if the unit keeps running.

Chemical or sweet smells point to a refrigerant leak. Stop running the system and call today, since the leak gets worse the longer the unit operates.

Musty smells are more common but less urgent. Southlake summers bring high humidity, and moisture in the drain pan or ducts grows mold over time. Schedule service within the week to clean the system before the smell spreads through your home.

Short Cycling (Turning On and Off Rapidly)

Short cycling is when your AC turns on, runs for a few minutes, shuts off, and kicks back on shortly after. A healthy system runs in cycles of 15 to 20 minutes. If yours is cycling in under 10, something is wrong.

This one costs you twice. Your electric bill climbs because the system uses the most power during startup, and the compressor wears out faster from the constant stress. A compressor that should last 15 years can fail in half that time if short cycling goes unchecked.

The most common causes we find are:

  • Low refrigerant from a slow leak
  • A dirty or iced-over evaporator coil
  • A thermostat placed in direct sunlight or near a vent
  • An oversized unit that cools the house too fast
  • A failing capacitor or control board

Thermostat placement is worth checking yourself. If your thermostat sits in a sunny hallway or near a supply vent, it reads a false temperature and shuts the system off early. Moving it isn't a DIY job, but noting the location helps the technician diagnose faster.

Short cycling is a within-a-few-days call, not an emergency. The longer it continues, the more damage it does to the compressor, which is the priciest part in the system.

Higher-Than-Expected Electric Bills

A rising electric bill is often the quietest warning sign, and the one most people ignore. Your AC still cools the house, so nothing feels broken. Meanwhile, the system is working harder every month to do the same job.

Compare your current bill to the same month last year. A jump of 20 percent or more, without a heat wave or rate change to explain it, points to a cooling system losing efficiency.

The usual causes we find are:

  • A slowly failing capacitor making the motor pull more amps
  • Dirty condenser or evaporator coils reducing heat transfer
  • Refrigerant loss from a small leak
  • A clogged filter restricting airflow
  • Duct leaks sending cool air into the attic

On tune-up calls in Southlake homes, we often find systems drawing 20 to 30 percent more power than they should, usually from a failing capacitor the homeowner had no way to know about. The part itself is small, but the bill impact adds up over a Texas summer — especially for larger homes running multiple zones.

If your bill keeps climbing month over month, schedule a service visit. Catching the cause early almost always costs less than the extra power you'll pay for while the problem continues.

What to Do Before the Technician Arrives

A few quick steps before your appointment save time, protect your home, and help the technician diagnose faster. None of these take more than a few minutes.

Here's what to do:

  • Change the air filter if it's dirty or more than 90 days old
  • Clear debris from around the outdoor condenser unit, including leaves, grass clippings, and branches
  • Write down what you've noticed — when the problem started, what sounds or smells you've heard, and which rooms feel worst
  • Shut the system off if you smell burning or see ice on the indoor unit
  • Clear a path to the indoor unit, breaker panel, and thermostat
  • Secure pets in another room during the visit

The notes step matters more than people expect. AC problems often come and go, and a symptom the technician can't reproduce is harder to diagnose. Telling us the system only short cycles in the afternoon, or only smells musty when the fan runs, points us straight to the cause.

When our technicians arrive at a Southlake home, the first checks are usually the thermostat reading, the filter condition, the refrigerant pressure, and the amp draw on the outdoor unit. Having those areas accessible shaves time off the visit.

Frequently Asked Questions



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We're There When You Need Us!

877-746-6855

Berkeys Plumbing, A/C & Electrical in Southlake • 1070 S Kimball Ave Suite 131, Southlake, TX 76092 • 817-481-5869

We're There When You Need Us!

877-746-6855