Error Code: Daikin E7
What it means: Daikin error code E7 indicates an outdoor fan motor fault. The outdoor unit’s inverter-driven fan motor is monitored by the outdoor PCB (main control board). If the motor fails to start, runs below minimum RPM, or the motor feedback signal (from the Hall effect sensor or DC motor drive circuit) falls outside normal parameters, the outdoor board faults with E7 and shuts down the compressor to prevent damage. E7 appears on the indoor unit display and is logged in the outdoor controller’s fault history.
Common Causes
- Failed outdoor fan motor — DC fan motors in Daikin outdoor units fail at the motor windings or the built-in Hall effect sensor. Common on units 5–10 years old or those exposed to moisture intrusion.
- Faulty outdoor PCB / inverter board — The outdoor main board controls the fan motor speed via PWM (pulse-width modulation). A failed driver circuit on the board prevents the motor from receiving correct drive signals.
- Blocked fan blade or debris — A jammed fan blade (leaves, ice, wire) causes the motor to stall under load. The control detects the stall and faults.
- Failed fan motor capacitor — Some older Daikin outdoor units use PSC-type fan motors with separate run capacitors. A failed capacitor causes the motor to hum but not start.
- Motor wiring fault — A disconnected or damaged motor connector between the motor and outdoor PCB breaks the signal loop.
Diagnosis Steps
- Power off the outdoor unit at the disconnect. Inspect the outdoor fan blade for debris, ice, or physical obstruction. Clear anything blocking the fan.
- Try to spin the fan blade by hand — it should rotate smoothly with no grinding, scraping, or resistance. Stiff rotation indicates failed bearings.
- Restore power and initiate a cooling or heating call. Observe the outdoor unit — the fan should start within 30–60 seconds. Listen for humming (motor trying to start but failing) vs. complete silence.
- If the motor hums but doesn’t spin: check for a run capacitor (on PSC-motor units). Measure capacitor MFD — below 10% of rated value requires replacement.
- If the motor is silent and no capacitor is present (DC motor unit): the motor or outdoor PCB fan driver circuit has failed. A technician with a DC motor analyzer can isolate which component has failed.
Fix
Clear debris and test for blade obstruction first — this is a common field fix requiring no parts. If the fan blade spins freely but the motor won’t run, the motor has likely failed.
On PSC-motor units (older Daikin split systems), replace the capacitor first — it is inexpensive and often the root cause on motors that hum but won’t start.
On DC inverter fan motor units (most current Daikin mini-splits), the fan motor is a DC brushless unit powered directly from the outdoor PCB. If the motor windings are open or the Hall sensor has failed, replace the motor assembly. If motor checks out (correct winding resistance per wiring diagram), suspect the outdoor PCB fan driver circuit and replace the board.
Parts
| Part | Where to Buy |
|---|---|
| Daikin outdoor fan motor | RepairClinic, SupplyHouse |
| Fan motor run capacitor (PSC models) | Grainger, Amazon |
| Outdoor main PCB | SupplyHouse, Grainger |
When to Call a Technician
DC motor diagnosis requires a wiring diagram and a multimeter capable of measuring DC motor winding resistance. Outdoor PCB replacement involves working with line voltage and inverter circuits — this should be done by a licensed HVAC/R technician. Refrigerant system handling is not involved in this repair, but inverter board work is not DIY-appropriate.