Why choose Dimplex?
With 75 years of trading experience and a dedication to innovation and sustainability, Dimplex continues to provide award winning services across multiple sectors to their customers. With experienced specialists at hand to provide swift end to end service and support your project, Dimplex are dedicated to adding value and exceeding expectations.
Comprehensive service
We strive to be customer-focused in our business. Our Help Centre is complete with expert product information and intuitive to your needs. Product manuals and troubleshooting guides provide insights when choosing solutions for your home.
Our CommitmentSustainability strategy
As part of Glen Dimplex Group, we are committed to dealing with the sustainability challenges that come with providing heating and ventilation solutions. We aim to redesign the future with solutions that care for people and planet.
Our VisionEffective partnership
For our trade partners, we provide expertise gained through years of experience. Our curated resource library includes technical guidelines and specification information, to support you at every stage of your project.
Our Goals
Sectors
Learn more about what we do. Our range of HVAC solutions aim to provide future proof technologies to building projects over various sectors.
Which is better - a ground source or an air source heat pump?
When it comes to specifying heat pumps, we are often asked which is better: a ground source or an air source heat pump. In actual fact neither are ‘better’. The decision comes down to design factors on a specific project, which will drive the specification to ensure the demands required by the building and occupants are met.
Which heating and cooling emitters can I use with a heat pump?
Any hydronic heating and cooling emitter such as fan coils, radiators or trench heating, could be used with a heat pump.
There are a number of factors, however, which will ultimately impact the final specification. These include thermal requirements, such as whether the building needs heating only or heating and cooling, control requirements and design preferences, such as whether to have the emitter recessed or on view.
Will the outcomes of COP26 significantly speed up the uptake of low carbon technologies?
We are all waiting to see what the real impact will be from the climate summit COP26 for the construction sector, specifically with regard to the decarbonisation of heat. One of the insights that came out of the second day of the summit, which featured a session on clean technology and innovation, was delivered by UK Prime Minister, Boris Johnson:
‘By making clean technology the most affordable, accessible and attractive choice, the default go-to in what are currently the most polluting sectors, we can cut emissions right around the world’.