Re TESP - The only pressure I have control over is the filter. That is what I am focused on. I have contacted my HVAC folks to inspect and clean the A coil. They are too busy right now and said they will happily get to it as soon as things slow a little for them. I suspect it needs a cleaning. That said, if the low pressure is inside the first few inches of the return inlet, and the high pressure is in the room, it is measuring the total pressure drop from the inlet to outlet. Think about it.
Total static is measured from the inlet to the outlet
of the unit. The measurement is external to the unit itself rather than external to the unit plus the supply duct system as you suggest.
Any measurement taken prior to the fan, and referenced to surrounding atmospheric pressure will be a negative pressure.
The measurement at the unit's outlet with the same reference as above will be a positive pressure and is a measurement of the pressure drop thru the supply duct system and diffusers.
The total static is obtained by adding the absolute values of both readings. For example, 0.2" negative at the inlet and 0.2" positive at the outlet woud give you a total external static of 0.4".
Ideally, its easiest to use a manometer capable of directly reading differential pressure, but its also possible to do the same readings with one referenced to atmospheric pressure.
Obviously, you can't control the supply static pressure, but you need to know what its value is in order to judge the maximum allowable static pressure drop on the intake side so that you can keep the total static within the design limits of the unit.
Unless I've missed it, you haven't mentioned the size of your condensing unit. As I mentioned previously, the 1200 cfm @ 1/2" tesp would correspond to a 3 ton unit as most all equipment is based on 400 cfm per ton. In your area, where summer humidity levels are low, you have a low ratio of latent to sensible load. It would be unusual to have 3 tons on 1400 sq ft in that location.
That you measure a temperature drop of only 13.5* says something is wrong. Either the condensing unit is operating under capacity, or the system is handling too much air. If the system is handling too much air, then the pressure drop across the filter will be higher than it would be if the unit was handling the proper amount of air. With a low latent load percentage, you should easily get a temperature drop of 20* or more with a condensing unit operating at design capacity and a fan handling the proper amount of air across the evaporator.
There's a reason its called a hvac
system. All things are inter-related. Making the assumption, for example, that more air is better (fan on highest speed for cooling) and if the temp drop is only 13*, it is what it is, only serves to ignore the fact that the system is possibly handling too much air and that this is a possible cause of difficulty in efficient filtering as well as the basic cause of higher pressure drops thru all parts of the system since the ducts are (or should be) sized based on system capacity and corresponding air quantities rather than the max cfm the fan can push thru the system.
FWIW, you can get a good idea of whether or not the evaporator coil needs cleaning by measuring the pressure drop across the coil. On residential units, the pressure drop should be 0.3" or less with the system operating and the coil wet. If its more than that, then its likely dirty enough to warrant the expense of cleaning. If its down in the 0.2" range or less, then cleaning is likely a waste of money.