When it melts it drips an excess amount of water that the pan may not be able to handle.
Evaporator coil dripping water on filter.
The under side of the coil was bent and was causing water to puddle on the filter.
Anything that is below the dew point will sweat.
Spraying jet dry on the coils.
What makes an air conditioner drip water from the coils.
A frozen evaporator coil can lead to dripping water that will leave telltale signs of moisture in your drain pan.
The ice water will sweat a small pool of water onto the table or.
Window air conditioners have a nasty habit of dripping on whatever or whomever stands below as they hum away on a hot sticky day.
Has anyone found a solution to this.
Check the air filter and change.
As air cools down it releases the humidity it carries as liquid water.
It s like having an ice cold glass of ice water sitting on a table in the summertime.
In either case this will cause the evaporator coil to ice up and leak water over the edge of the condensate drain pan.
When that frozen evaporator coil melts there may be so much water that it flows over the drain pan and then onto the floor.
If you burn candles or anything else oily the fins get coated in oil and cause water to drip from the coil rather than wick into the drain pan.
When that happens the evaporator coil gets too cold and freezes over.
Air conditioners can leak water for a few reasons.
Air conditioner condensation water dripping your ac has an evaporator coil.
The evaporator coil is most likely to freeze if your refrigerant levels are low.
The evaporator coil is frozen.
So what s causing your ac coils to freeze up in the first place.
It is possible that the airflow over the indoor evaporator coil is restricted due to either a dirty coil or a dirty air filter.
Check your air filter to see if it s dirty and change it if needed.
A dirty air filter blocks airflow over the evaporator coil.
Why your ac filter is wet.
Dirty air filter a dirty air filter blocks airflow over the evaporator coil causing the temperature to drop below freezing and ice up.
This water condenses on the evaporator coil similar to the condensation that appears on a cold glass of lemonade.
If that doesn t work the coil is not clean enough.
If you re dealing with low refrigerant levels this often indicates a refrigerant leak somewhere in the system.
This evaporator coil is designed to operate below the dew point.
There are 2 common causes of a frozen evaporator coil.
On a cool night it gives those frozen coils enough time to thaw out and leak water in your home.
When air conditioners suck in warm air these systems immediately send it through the evaporator coil to cool down.
Doing more research it appears that this is a common trane defect for the evaporator coil to drip onto the filter.