Not trying to argue.
This picture was taken in 2023
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This model has been discontinued since it used R410A refrigerant, but looking at the engineering manual today, with a dry bulb outdoor temp of -5F with a indoor temp dry bulb temp of 70F, the table shows it it will produce 12,600 BTU/h of heat (and this isn't even a high heat unit).
Below is the fan speed table for this unit
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Keep in mind, no matter what the outdoor temp, it won't affect the indoor blower speed.
What I can tell you is that for this system in heating, this room (I'd need to go back to my manual J for the exact measurements, but it was done correctly) can maintain a 68F indoor temp at a 5F OAT all day long.
Older heat pump systems used to produce a discharge temp of around 96F, which is why a lot of people didn't like them. Although in cooler temps the room could be kept at 70F indoor, to people used to gas heat (much higher discharge air air temp) a heat pump felt cold if they could feel the air blowing on them because the discharge air temp was lower than their body temp.
I'm a big proponent of experimenting on my own home for "real life conditions" and what I can tell you is that you can use some standard ducted heat pumps and maintain 70F inside at 10F outside air temp all day long, even in New Hampshire (and a single stage will bring on your strip heater faster than a two stage compressor at the same outdoor temp).
I was never a big proponent of whole home dehumidifiers because the argument was that a variable speed blower with a multi stage compressor can dehumidify better that a standard blower with single stage compressor, and that is true, but it can never come as close as dehumidifying better with a single stage compressor with standard blower HVAC system using a whole house dehumidifier.
Don't get me wrong, I would still use a furnace for back up heat if I lived up north, but I would still dual fuel it with a heat pump if I we're on LP for fuel because pretty much any single stage heat pump will handle down to 30F OAT without strips, and in most cases generally cheaper to run electric than burn propane (at least in my area where it's over $3.50 a gallon. For the price difference on a heat pump outdoor unit vs AC outdoor unit (using pretty much the same coil) the ROI can be had in the first year on high dollar LP using gas as a secondary heat.