Heating Installation for Scott Homeowners
Scott straddles the I-10 corridor on the western side of Lafayette Parish, and its residential growth has brought a steady stream of new subdivisions alongside the town’s original neighborhoods near Apollo Road and St. Mary Street. Many homeowners here are reaching that point where their original heating system, installed when the house was built 15 or 20 years ago, is showing its age: higher energy bills, more frequent repairs, uneven heating between rooms.
If that sounds familiar, it’s time to start thinking about replacement rather than another repair.
Heat Pumps: The Standard Choice in Scott
Most homes in Scott built after 2000 have heat pump systems. Heat pumps make sense for our area because they combine heating and cooling into one system. In winter, the unit extracts heat from outdoor air and moves it inside. In summer, it reverses direction and works as an air conditioner. You maintain one outdoor unit and one indoor air handler instead of managing a furnace and an AC separately.
In Scott’s climate, where January lows average around 38 degrees, a heat pump operates well within its efficient range for virtually the entire heating season. Variable-speed models are especially effective here. They ramp up and down continuously to match the load, maintaining consistent temperatures throughout your home instead of the on-off cycling of older single-stage equipment.
One thing to consider: heat pumps deliver air at a lower temperature than gas furnaces (around 90 to 100 degrees at the register, versus 120 to 140 for gas). The air feels less warm on your skin, even though the system is effectively heating your home. If you’re switching from a gas furnace to a heat pump for the first time, the difference takes some adjustment.
When Gas Makes More Sense
Scott has natural gas availability in most neighborhoods, and some homeowners prefer the characteristics of a gas furnace. The air is hotter at the register, the system responds quickly to thermostat changes, and gas furnaces are unaffected by outdoor temperature extremes. If your home already has gas piping and a proper flue, replacing a gas furnace with a new high-efficiency condensing model is straightforward.
A new gas furnace with 96% AFUE is dramatically more efficient than the 80% unit it’s likely replacing. On your gas bill, you’ll notice the difference.
System Sizing and Ductwork
Two things determine whether a heating installation delivers on its promise: correct sizing and functional ductwork.
Sizing starts with a Manual J load calculation. We measure insulation, window area, ceiling height, orientation, and air leakage to determine the exact heating capacity your home needs. In Scott’s newer subdivisions, where homes tend to be well-insulated and tightly built, we often find that previous systems were oversized. An oversized system wastes energy and creates comfort problems, especially with humidity management during the cooling season.
Ductwork is the delivery system. If your ducts leak, have disconnected joints, or are poorly insulated in attic space, you’re losing conditioned air before it reaches your living areas. We assess your ductwork during every installation evaluation. If repairs are needed, doing them alongside the equipment installation saves time, money, and the disruption of a second service visit.
What to Expect on Installation Day
A standard heat pump or furnace replacement takes one day. We arrive in the morning, remove the old equipment, set the new system, complete all electrical, gas, and refrigerant connections, and test everything before we leave. System conversions (switching from gas to heat pump or vice versa) take about a day and a half due to additional wiring and configuration.
As a Lennox® Premier Dealer, we install high-efficiency Lennox equipment backed by strong warranty protection. We also work with other manufacturers when the situation calls for it.
Call F & R Air Conditioning at (337) 893-5646 to schedule a heating installation consultation for your Scott home.