Heating

Differences in heat pumps – CONCEPTS

Hydrobox:

The Hydrobox is the internal unit of the heat pump. The refrigerant, which gains heat energy in the outdoor unit, transfers this energy to the water via a plate heat exchanger (hydrobox). It produces hot water at temperatures up to 55°C and includes a heating circulator, expansion tank, remote control and auxiliary electric heating. An integrated control system controls all valves, pumps and other parts of the system. At very low outside air temperatures, it also allows the activation and control of the existing heating system.

All in one:

The heat pump uses an air-to-water heat pump system to produce hot water up to 65°C for underfloor heating, radiators or DHW. It is suitable for both new buildings and renovations, as it can be combined with existing heating.

Monoblock:

A monoblock is an air-to-water heat pump with all components housed in a single enclosure. The entire refrigerant cycle takes place inside, ensuring quieter, more efficient and sophisticated operation. The heating water enters directly into the outdoor heating unit, ensuring quick installation and space-saving indoors.

DHW tank:

A storage tank for heating and DHW is a tank within a tank, where the smaller tank is used to heat domestic hot water and the larger tank is used to store excess heating water. DHW is heated by a heat pump up to approx. 42°C.