The small component that controls refrigerant flow β and why itβs critical to your ACβs cooling performance and efficiency.
Your AC doesnβt just move refrigerant β it carefully meters it. The expansion valve is what makes that precision possible.
The expansion valve is a metering device that controls how much refrigerant enters your evaporator coil.
It reduces pressure and regulates flow so your system can properly absorb heat from inside your home.
Without it, refrigerant would either flood the coil or starve it β both of which severely reduce cooling performance.
Reduces high-pressure liquid refrigerant into a low-pressure state.
Regulates how much refrigerant enters the evaporator coil.
Allows refrigerant to absorb heat and cool your home effectively.
The most advanced and common type in modern systems. It adjusts refrigerant flow automatically based on temperature and demand.
A simpler device that allows a constant flow of refrigerant regardless of conditions.
Improper refrigerant flow reduces cooling capacity.
Restricted flow can cause the coil to freeze.
System turns on and off frequently due to imbalance.
Abnormal high or low refrigerant pressures.
System runs longer due to inefficiency.
Rooms cool unevenly throughout the home.
Expansion valve issues are often misdiagnosed as low refrigerant or compressor failure.
Proper testing is required before any repair or recharge is performed.
We fix the root cause β not just the symptoms.
Yes β improper flow can cause symptoms very similar to low charge.
It varies, but typically more involved due to refrigerant handling and system access.
No β it requires EPA certification and specialized HVAC tools.
Yes β clean systems with proper airflow reduce strain and contamination.
It could be your expansion valve β we diagnose it correctly the first time.