My Old Tools
Well-known member
In Texas, load calculations are done on the cooling side as we are a cooling dominate climate. A unit sized for your cooling load may be inadequate for the 5 days a year when it gets really cold. A delta T of 20 degrees between return are and output air is pretty reasonable for most heat pumps. That Delta T diminishes as the temps fall below the design of the unit, it gets less efficient at transferring heat. If your house isn't well insulated (and most in Texas aren't compared to our northern friends), then it can't supply enough heat to keep up. My house is quite inefficient as it has a ton of glass as well as being 30 years old. I went with a geothermal heat pump tied to our lake. The lake never drops below 44 degrees in the winter nor more than 80-85 in the summer, so a heat pump works pretty well. Our previous system was a conventional heat pump with propane backup. With the price of propane now, the geo will pay for itself before it dies.