well, just a note that "surface temperature" and "heat dissipation" are not the same thing. Surface temperature is directly related to reliability, but it is only one factor in the amount of heat a unit disipates. A very hot, low mass unit may generate far less heat than a warm high mass unit, depending on their relative mass and temperature delta.
If your concern is the required "cooling budget", the number of BTU's or Ton's of AC required to keep a room cool, the surface temperature alone does not tell the whole story. Surface temperature must be considered with the mass of the unit. Both the 33H and 33 represent some good mass.
Assess the unit's required input power, and the unit's efficiency, then calculate the total watts consumed by the unit. That gives the amount of heat, in watts, that the unit will disipate into the room. That is the heat that must be offset with "ton's" (or BTU's) of AC.
when I last heard the larger 33's, with a pair Wilson MAXX's, they were pretty awesome. I'd want to have two tons of AC dedicated for them in the summer time though, in addition to the houses cooling budget. It would be worth every penny.