Switzerland as a Reference Market
Switzerland is not an easy market for heating systems. Requirements are clear and uncompromising:
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High efficiency is expected, not promoted
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Low noise is a necessity, not a feature
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Long-term stability matters more than peak performance claims
Systems are judged over years of operation, not short demonstrations. For Exinda, this makes Switzerland a meaningful reference—not because conditions are extreme, but because expectations are precise.
What Matters to Exinda
At Exinda, product decisions are guided by a few consistent values:
Stability Over Time
We design systems to run continuously in winter conditions, not to impress on paper. Long-term operation without intervention is the baseline.
Engineering Before Marketing
Defrost logic, component selection, airflow design, and control stability are treated as engineering problems, not selling points. If a system works quietly and consistently, it does not need explanation.
Respect for the Installation Environment
Snow coverage, humidity, temperature swings, and residential noise sensitivity are normal operating conditions in Switzerland. Our systems are designed with these realities in mind.
Support Is Part of the Product
A heat pump does not stop at the factory gate. Technical clarity, application guidance, and ongoing support are part of how Exinda works with partners and customers.
Why This Feedback Matters
The value of this Swiss installation is not the temperature number or the weather event.
It is the fact that nothing unusual happened.
The system did not require special attention.
It did not behave differently because of snow.
It simply continued operating as expected.
That is the outcome Exinda aims for in every market.
A Quiet Confirmation of Our Direction
We share this experience not as a promotion, but as a confirmation.
When an air-to-water heat pump operates for years in Switzerland—and continues to do so during snow and sub-zero temperatures—it reflects consistency in design, manufacturing, and support.
This is how Exinda defines success:
systems that do their job, quietly and reliably, over time.






