Sorry to be an old wet blanket, but as a general rule, good desuperheating is dependent on the atomization of the water into fine droplets that can be evaporated, and cool the steam in the process. The better the atomization, the better the desuperheating process.
Good atomization takes energy, and sometimes, lots of it. I am highly suspicious, notwithstanding the designs of particular brands, of desuperheaters from whomever that don't have the water pressure at some value well above line pressure, unless they have some kind of mechanical or physical "wizard" that does the atomization that normally requires the higher pressure. Copes vulcan had or has, I don't know any more, their VO 76 which had a floating plug in an anular orifice, and that thing would get good atomization in the high velocity zone as the steam flowed around the plug, so physical features made up for lack of water pressure, and these things would control as close as 5F from saturation with ease, and with lots and lots of turndown.
Turndown is also a factor in selection of the style of desuperheater you choose. The style mentioned, in a quick glance looks like it would not be good for high turndown. If you need good control, and good turndown, most manufacturers have a steam atomized model, where the lack of high water pressure is made up by the energy in the atomizing steam that "blasts" the water into smytherines.
I was also suspicious of the 30 ft downstream distance to the temperature probe, and more suspicious when I saw the type of desuperheater that it is. The farther you can put the temperature probe, the better the mixing, and temperature equilization.
In this model of desuperheater, it appears to me that high velocity would be essential to good atomization and mixing, but detrimental to a temperature probe only 30 ft from the DSH. Just my opinion.
We weren't told how close A/C wanted to control, or what his "from and to" were, so it is hard to evaluate this application.