First he is putting it in the crawlspace not the attic. [SIDE NOTE ON AC] typically in AC they teach you to put it as high as possible as cool air falls, hot air rises. So he could run ducting to the ceiling and have it drop down, but that sounds like way too much effort.[/SIDE NOTE ON AC] I can't say I have ever been in a crawl space that was 90 degrees, even if it is over 100 degrees out. More then likely it will be more like 70 degrees, so 70 dropping to 50 is reasonable, not ideal but it will work. Especially if he can get it to draw in air from the room as it cools off, and exhaust the hot air out of the crawl space.
Yeah I didnt see that he was putting it in the crawlspace. Either way, the little fan wheel and small blower wont be able to handle the added resistance from the duct if its more than a couple feet. The system is not designed for it, If the duct is too small there will be low airflow he will have a unit that will freeze up.
The only time temp drop across the evap is "supposed" to be ~20 degrees, is on cheap evap cores (all aluminum or aluminum / copper cores), BUT realistically that is all you need for 90% of the situations. Now keep in mind I stay as far away from residential and commercial AC as I possibly can, you have to work too much and not get paid enough, and there are 10,000 guys out there looking to undercut each other.
Honestly i dont think you know what your talking about on the evap coils. Copper/aluminum cores have been used forever, and are the choice of all brands unless you need an all copper or coated coil for a space with particles in the air that will eat at the coils or some specialized equipment. I can be workin on a 20ton roof top unit one day and a 300ton unit the next day, they all use aluminum/copper coils.
Also The temp drop across the evap coils should be around 20 degrees on an air/air evap coil during full load conditions on a normal system. Evap temp drop will change depending on outdoor ambient, indoor drybulb temperature, indoor wet bulb temperature and airflow in CFM through the evap coil.
Now if your talking specialized equipment, its a different story. the system can be designed to do whatever the person wants, but thats going to be different and is the not the same operation as a normal system.
as for the money thing, starting pay here is 20 plus all paid healthcare, dental, pension, and training. The top pay is over 42 an hour on the check plus all the other stuff, Seems pretty good to me. All I do is commercial/industrial work. we work on systems from 3 ton split systems to 500+ ton chillers.