Fabian7
2020-02-10 22:34:20
- #1
Hello,
I am currently planning a single-family house and the heating is supposed to be an air-to-water heat pump. My installer has had good experiences with Dimplex and therefore recommended it. After some research regarding heat pumps, I have the feeling that "modern" air-to-water heat pumps should have an inverter in order to operate power-modulated and thus more efficiently. Is that basically correct? In the Dimplex System M heat pumps, the Plus models (e.g., System M Compact Plus) have an inverter installed, but the marketing brochures always speak of "including inverter technology for short-term power boost." Now I am a bit confused about the function of the inverter in the mentioned heat pump. Is it power-modulated and thus efficient over the entire time, or only for short-term power boosts?
Best regards
I am currently planning a single-family house and the heating is supposed to be an air-to-water heat pump. My installer has had good experiences with Dimplex and therefore recommended it. After some research regarding heat pumps, I have the feeling that "modern" air-to-water heat pumps should have an inverter in order to operate power-modulated and thus more efficiently. Is that basically correct? In the Dimplex System M heat pumps, the Plus models (e.g., System M Compact Plus) have an inverter installed, but the marketing brochures always speak of "including inverter technology for short-term power boost." Now I am a bit confused about the function of the inverter in the mentioned heat pump. Is it power-modulated and thus efficient over the entire time, or only for short-term power boosts?
Best regards