Heat Pump Solutions for Scott’s Growing Community
Scott straddles the I-10 and I-49 interchange, giving it a unique position in Lafayette Parish. The town has grown steadily, with new neighborhoods mixing in among the more established areas along Apollo Road and the streets near Scott Middle School. For homeowners here, whether you’re in a home that’s been in the family for decades or a build that went up last year, heat pumps represent the most practical HVAC investment you can make.
The math works because of geography. Scott sits squarely in the subtropical climate zone, with an average of roughly 2,200 cooling degree days and only about 1,400 heating degree days per year. That means your system works on cooling roughly twice as much as heating. A heat pump excels at both, but the efficiency gains on the heating side are where it really separates from traditional setups.
From Furnace and AC to One System
If you currently run a split system with an outdoor AC unit and an indoor gas furnace, here’s what changes with a heat pump. The outdoor unit gets replaced with a heat pump condenser, which looks nearly identical to your current AC unit. Inside, the gas furnace comes out and an air handler goes in. The air handler has electric backup heat strips for those rare below-freezing nights.
In summer, the system runs exactly like your old AC. You won’t notice any difference in cooling performance. In winter, instead of burning gas to create heat, the heat pump extracts heat energy from the outdoor air and moves it inside. This transfer process uses far less energy than combustion heating. On a typical January day in Scott, when the outdoor temperature is 45 to 50 degrees, your heat pump operates at about 300 percent efficiency, meaning it moves three units of heat energy for every one unit of electricity it consumes.
What Proper Sizing Looks Like
Every home is different, and cookie-cutter sizing leads to problems. We’ve seen homes in Scott with 4-ton systems that should have been 3-ton, installed by companies that used the old “one ton per 500 square feet” rule of thumb. That rule ignores insulation, window quality, duct design, attic conditions, and building orientation. The result is a system that short-cycles, fails to dehumidify, and costs more to operate than a correctly sized unit.
Our process starts with a Manual J load calculation. We measure your home, check insulation levels in the attic and walls, catalog your windows, assess duct condition and layout, and note which direction your home faces. A south-facing home with large windows on Apollo Road has a different cooling load than a shaded home on a tree-lined street near the Boudin Festival grounds.
The right-sized heat pump runs longer, steadier cycles. That matters enormously in Acadiana’s humid climate because longer run times mean more moisture removal. A system that cycles on and off every 10 minutes cools the air but leaves the humidity high, so you drop the thermostat to compensate and waste money.
Ductwork and Infrastructure
Before any heat pump goes in, we inspect what’s already there. Scott homes from the 1970s and 1980s often have flex duct in the attic that’s seen better days. Crushed sections, failed connections, and deteriorated insulation are common. Homes with ductwork issues lose 20 to 30 percent of their conditioned air before it reaches the rooms it’s meant to serve.
We’ll also check your electrical panel. Most homes in Scott have 200-amp service, which handles a heat pump without issue. If your panel is 150 amps or less, an upgrade may be needed to support the equipment and its backup heat strips. We’ll identify this upfront so the full project scope is clear before you commit.
If ductwork improvements are needed, we handle them as part of the installation. Getting the ductwork right ensures your new heat pump actually delivers the comfort and efficiency it’s rated for.
Dual-Fuel: A Limited Case
Dual-fuel pairs a heat pump with a gas furnace so you have the efficiency of electric heating most of the year with gas backup for the coldest nights. In Scott’s climate, the furnace would fire maybe 10 to 15 times per winter. If your furnace is relatively new and working well, it can make sense to add a heat pump alongside it rather than replacing everything. But for a full system replacement, all-electric is typically the smarter investment in our mild climate.
Let’s Get Started
F & R Air Conditioning serves Scott and all of Lafayette Parish from our shop in Abbeville. For a heat pump assessment, call (337) 893-5646. We’ll evaluate your home and give you a clear recommendation with no obligation.