What Your Furnace Is Trying to Tell You
A properly functioning furnace should be heard but not noticed — a soft hum of the blower, a clean click-and-whomp of ignition, and steady airflow. When you start noticing new sounds, your furnace is communicating a problem. In Minnesota, diagnosing furnace noises before they escalate prevents mid-winter breakdowns. Here's what the most common furnace sounds mean.
Furnace Noise Diagnosis Guide
- Banging or booming at startup: Usually "delayed ignition" — gas accumulates in the combustion chamber before igniting, causing a small explosion. Caused by a dirty flame sensor, faulty ignitor, or dirty burners. Address immediately — repeated banging can crack the heat exchanger.
- Banging or popping from ducts: Usually thermal expansion — duct metal flexing as it heats and cools. Often caused by undersized ducts, closed registers, or a dirty filter restricting airflow. See our ductwork guide and filter guide.
- Squealing or screeching: Typically a blower motor issue — worn bearings or a slipping belt (older furnaces). Requires prompt attention to avoid full motor failure.
- Grinding: Metal-on-metal contact in the blower wheel or motor bearings. Stop the furnace and call for service — running a grinding furnace causes rapid additional damage.
- Rattling: Loose panels, screws, or sheet metal. Often harmless but worth checking. Also can indicate debris in the blower or a cracked heat exchanger — inspect the heat exchanger if rattling is new.
- Clicking at startup then nothing: Failed ignition. The ignitor clicks but the burner doesn't light. Check the ignitor and flame sensor first.
- Clicking continuously during operation: Often a control board issue or a failing relay. Requires professional diagnosis.
- Humming without airflow: Blower motor trying to start but failing — often a bad capacitor. See our blower motor guide.
When Noise Means Replace, Not Repair
If your furnace is over 15 years old and developing multiple noise-related issues, consider the cost of repair against a new unit. A new Goodman from Furnace Direct at factory-direct pricing often costs less than extensive repairs on aging equipment — and delivers 96% AFUE efficiency versus 60–70% from an old unit. Our buying guide helps you evaluate your options.
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