A splitter damper blade breaks loose inside duct
A loose splitter blade can rattle, block airflow, and damage the duct. Locate it, stop unsafe operation if needed, and access/secure/remove it with foreman approval before patching the duct correctly.
['A rattling internal blade is not just noise. If it breaks loose from the rod, it can block a branch, bang around, cut liner, or break further hardware.', 'The useful field path is to locate the fitting, confirm airflow loss/noise, open an approved access point if needed, secure or remove the failed blade, replace the regulator/hardware, and patch/seal the access opening properly. Do not cut random holes without a plan.']
Stop if
- Use this as training guidance. The foreman, approved drawings, project specs, manufacturer installation instructions, employer safety policy, and AHJ/code requirements always control the final answer.
Check
- A loose blade can block airflow, create noise complaints, fail TAB, and damage internal duct surfaces.
Steps
- Confirm which branch/zone lost air and where the noise is coming from.
- Check damper handle/regulator position outside the duct.
- Use an existing access point, register opening, mirror, or camera before cutting if possible.
- If cutting access, mark the patch size/location and avoid damaging liner, wiring, controls, or rated assemblies.
- Patch, fasten, and seal the opening per approved method after repair.
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