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AC Not Turning On
in Frisco, TX

An AC that will not start at all is a different problem than one that runs but does not cool. Usually the issue is in the electrical side of the system. Frisco gets heavy thunderstorms in spring and early summer, and the power fluctuations that come with those storms knock out small electrical parts inside AC units every season.

Quick Answer

When an AC will not turn on, the cause is usually electrical — a tripped breaker, a blown fuse, a bad capacitor, or a failed contactor. In Frisco, power surges during summer thunderstorms knock out capacitors and contactors more often than most people realize. Check the breaker first, and if that is not it, call (254) 279-4716 because guessing at electrical problems can damage the whole system.

AC Not Turning On in Frisco

Telltale Signs

Warning Signs to Watch For

  • Nothing happens when you turn the thermostat to cool and lower the temperature
  • The outdoor unit is completely silent and nothing is moving
  • The breaker for the AC tripped and keeps tripping when you reset it
  • You hear a clicking or humming from the outdoor unit but the fan and compressor never start
  • The thermostat screen is blank or unresponsive

Root Causes

What Causes AC Not Turning On?

1

Failed Capacitor

A capacitor is a small cylinder inside the outdoor unit that gives the motor a boost to start up. When it fails, the compressor and fan motor just hum but never actually start. Capacitors wear out faster in heat, and Frisco units running through 4 to 5 months of heavy cooling season every year burn through them on a regular cycle.

The Fix

Capacitor Replacement

A technician swaps the old capacitor for a new one matched to the unit's specs. It is a quick repair and the system usually starts right up once it is done.

2

Tripped or Faulty Breaker

The AC has a dedicated breaker in your electrical panel, and if it trips, the system gets no power at all. Frisco thunderstorms, especially the strong lines that roll through from the west in May and June, cause brief surges that trip breakers or weaken them so they trip under normal load afterward.

The Fix

Breaker Reset or Breaker Replacement

If the breaker resets and holds, the problem may be solved. If it trips again, the breaker itself may be faulty or there is a short somewhere in the system that needs to be found first.

3

Bad Contactor

The contactor is the switch that connects high-voltage power to the compressor and fan when the thermostat calls for cooling. When it burns out or sticks, that signal never gets through and the unit does not start. Contactors burn out more often in areas with frequent power fluctuations, which Frisco gets during storm season.

The Fix

Contactor Replacement

Replacing a contactor is straightforward for a technician with the right parts on hand. The old one gets pulled out and a matched replacement goes in, restoring the electrical connection the system needs to start.

Self-Diagnosis

Which Cause Applies to You?

Check the signs you're observing to narrow down the likely root cause before your inspection.

What You're Seeing Failed Capacitor Tripped or Faulty Breaker Bad Contactor
Unit hums briefly then goes silent when trying to start
Breaker in the electrical panel is tripped
No sound at all from the outdoor unit
Problem started right after a thunderstorm
Thermostat is on but outdoor unit does not respond