Boston's temperature swings are brutal on mechanical systems. A furnace that heats a Charlestown rowhouse through a January cold snap expands and contracts with every heating cycle. Metal ductwork flexes. Mounting brackets loosen. Blower motors work harder to push air through cold return ducts. By the time summer arrives and you switch to cooling, those same components have been through months of thermal stress. A loud air conditioner in July is often the result of damage that started in February.
We have been diagnosing noisy systems across Boston for years, and we understand the patterns. A furnace making noise in Jamaica Plain usually has different root causes than one in a new construction condo in Seaport. Older neighborhoods have ductwork that was never designed for modern high-efficiency equipment. Newer buildings have undersized ducts and return air paths that create velocity noise. We know the difference, and we know how to fix it without unnecessary replacements.