The fan is running. You can hear it. But the air coming through the vents feels barely different from outside — and outside is currently pushing 38 degrees.
Before you assume the system has failed, there’s a reasonably short list of things that cause this, and most of them you can check yourself in the next ten minutes. A genuine breakdown is actually one of the less likely explanations.
This guide works through the causes in the order worth checking them — starting with the things that take thirty seconds and cost nothing, finishing with the ones that need a professional.
Check This First — Is It Actually in Cooling Mode?
This is the single most common cause, and it costs nothing to check.
Evaporative coolers can run in two distinct modes: fan-only and cooling. In fan-only mode, the fan moves air through the home without the water pump running — useful on mild days or overnight, but it produces no cooling effect whatsoever. If the system is in fan-only mode, it will run exactly as you’re experiencing it: audible, moving air, producing nothing cold.
Check your controller for the cooling symbol — usually a water droplet or snowflake icon — and confirm it’s selected rather than just the fan setting. On most systems, both the fan and the water pump need to be active for cooling to occur.
Also check the timing. Most evaporative systems take five to ten minutes after switching to cooling mode before cold air actually reaches the vents — the pads need time to become fully saturated first. If you’ve just switched it on, give it the full ten minutes before assuming something’s wrong.
Is It Actually a Humid Day?
Evaporative cooling depends entirely on dry air. The system works by evaporating water from the cooling pads — and evaporation slows dramatically when the surrounding air is already holding a lot of moisture.
Perth is generally dry, which is why evaporative cooling performs so well here most of the time. But on days when the Fremantle Doctor brings a humidity shift in from the coast, or during the occasional tropical low that pushes moisture down from the north, evaporative systems genuinely cannot perform at their usual level — no matter how well-maintained they are.
This isn’t a fault. It’s the physics of how the technology works. On a humid day, switching to fan-only mode and relying on airflow and a wind-chill effect, rather than expecting full cooling, is the practical approach until conditions dry out again.
Are Your Windows and Doors Open Enough?
This catches more Perth homeowners than almost anything else on this list, particularly anyone who has previously owned a refrigerated split system.
Refrigerated air conditioning needs a sealed home to work efficiently. Evaporative cooling needs the opposite — it’s a flow-through system, constantly pushing fresh outdoor air into your home and needing somewhere for that air, and the heat it displaces, to escape. With doors and windows closed, air pressure builds up inside, the fan struggles against that pressure, and what you get is weak, stagnant, humid-feeling air rather than a flow of genuinely cool air.
Open windows about 10 to 15 centimetres in the rooms you want cooled, ideally on the opposite side of the house from where cool air enters, to create a path for air to move through rather than just in. If one specific room feels warmer than the rest, opening a window wider in that room specifically can noticeably improve how it performs.
Are the Cooling Pads the Problem?
The cooling pads are where the actual cooling happens — air passes through wet pad material, and evaporation pulls heat out of that air. When the pads are compromised, cooling drops regardless of how well everything else is functioning.
Dirty or scaled pads accumulate dust, pollen, and mineral deposits from Perth’s water supply over a season of use. This reduces how evenly and effectively the pads absorb water, creating dry patches that pass air through without cooling it.
Worn or aged pads — typically beyond two to three years of use — lose their structural ability to hold water effectively even when clean. If your pads look thin, brittle, cracked, or visibly discoloured, cleaning alone usually won’t restore them.
Dry patches on the pads indicate uneven water distribution — sometimes from scale blocking the small distribution lines that feed water across the pad surface, sometimes from a pad that’s deteriorated in specific sections.
A visual check is straightforward: with the system off, look at the pads through the access panel. Even, consistent moisture and a clean appearance is good. Patchy, white-crusted, or visibly dirty pads explain reduced performance directly.
Is Water Actually Reaching the Pads?
If air is moving but the pads aren’t getting properly wet, cooling drops sharply — the system is essentially blowing room-temperature air through dry material.
Low water level in the reservoir is the simplest cause. On hot days, evaporative systems can use a meaningful amount of water, and a reservoir that hasn’t been topped up or isn’t refilling properly leaves pads under-saturated.
A failing or clogged water pump stops water reaching the top of the pads at all. Listen for the pump — if you can’t hear water circulation when the system is in cooling mode, the pump may have failed or be blocked.
Mineral-clogged distribution lines — the small spider-like channels that spread water evenly across the top of the pads — are a near-certainty in any system that’s gone a year or two without professional descaling, given Perth’s mineral-rich water supply. Blocked distribution lines create the same dry-patch problem as worn pads, even when the pads themselves are in reasonable condition.
Expertise — Perth’s water hardness is a genuine factor in evaporative cooler performance that’s specific to this part of Australia. Mineral scale builds up inside the distribution system at a rate that surprises most homeowners, and it’s one of the primary reasons a system that cooled well two summers ago is noticeably weaker now, even with no other obvious fault.
Could It Be a Mechanical or Airflow Problem?
A loose or worn fan belt causes the blower fan to spin below its proper speed, reducing the static pressure that pushes air through the entire duct network. This shows up specifically as weak airflow in rooms furthest from the unit — a belt issue affects the whole system, but the rooms at the end of the duct run feel it first.
Damaged or disconnected ductwork in the roof space is a genuine possibility in any Perth home, particularly older properties or those that have had other roof work done. If a duct has torn, disconnected at a joint, or developed a hole, you’re effectively cooling the roof cavity instead of the room the duct was meant to serve. A vent with no airflow at all — rather than just weak airflow — points toward a duct connection issue specifically.
Blocked vents or obstructed airflow inside the home — furniture pushed against a vent, a closed register — restrict cooling for that specific area without affecting the rest of the house.
When Should You Call a Professional?
The checks above cover what you can reasonably assess yourself. A professional service is the right next step when:
- You’ve confirmed cooling mode, checked for humid conditions, opened windows appropriately, and performance is still poor
- The pads are visibly dirty, scaled, or worn and need cleaning or replacement
- You suspect the pump, fan belt, or motor based on noise or lack of water circulation
- Ductwork in the roof space needs inspection
- The system hasn’t had a professional service in more than a year
Conclusion
An evaporative cooler that’s running but not cooling is, more often than not, telling you something specific rather than failing outright. The mode setting, the day’s humidity, whether windows are open, the condition of the pads, and whether water is actually reaching them — working through these in order identifies the cause in the vast majority of cases.
What’s left after that — pump failure, scaled distribution lines, fan belt wear, or duct damage — is exactly what a professional service is for.