designbuild,
We disagree. What you say is true as far as it goes - "It is all dependent on the entering conditions and airflow." However, the only thing fixed about the entering conditions and airflow are your peak load calculations - that's it.
Under all conditions, the coil will drive toward saturation with Sensible cooling. Depending on the physical configuration of the coil, the latent turn down will occur as the cooling nears saturation. Those specific points may vary, but not the direction: Latent cooling.
Trying to limit that effect under all combinations of entering conditions is exactly the point. However, since the typical computer room has -0- latent load, you are starting off with a huge disadvantage - more accurately, an impossible mis-match.
Put simply, in small applications of 1-3 tons or a little more, you can get away with a somewhat oversized "normal coil" unit - so that the coil never gets very close to saturation. You will probably find that the differences are not enough to cause problems. That is essentially the same as recommending to size a unit by its sensible capacity. Too bad I tried to offer an explanation as to why one would do that.
As far as your argument about Liebert units, a high sensible coil is the first requirement for the specialized application. The other features are options, not product definitions. Even so, if you claim "precise control", one might ask, "How is that precision obtained?" It is fundamental, because the coil is designed to match the process!
Finally, no offense - but if you have used standard split systems for computer rooms, they can't have been too big. As with the rest of this discussion, for smaller applications of 1-3 tons, that is entirely possible. Slightly oversizing for a safety factor has the almost the same effect as sizing it for a sensible range, only. I have done it on many occasions myself.
That doesn't refute the underlying principles, or mean that you wouldn't have problems as you went to 10, 20, 30 tons and more.
Good luck on your future projects.