Originally Posted by
Boostlee @jimbo_se-r ; A car sitting still, does not exhibit the true airflow effects within the engine bay and over the vehicle. Once the vehicle is in motion, those stagnation temps may or may not be the same. Airflow occurs within the engine bay as well.
What does the temperature profile look like immediately after driving then stopping?? This may or may not paint a different picture.
Well, like I said, I have a very short commute, so all I saw when I immediately hopped out of the car to take a pic was the two warm spots there forming. The pic looked fairy similar, it just wasn't as hot yet. I totally understand what you mean about the airflow in motion, and totally agree.
I just got back from lunch, and snapped three more pics, as follows:
The above pic was from a drive down the highway, drive time was about 12 minutes, 10 of which were on the highway. I intentionally used lower gears whenever possible to keep the revs up, anywhere from 3k-5k. Outside temp was about 75 degrees.
This one kinda surprised me. After eating lunch (about 15 minutes later), I was expecting the hood temp to have evened out, and it was sitting in the sun (black car, Texas heat, loads of fun). But I was surprised to see the temp range had risen quite a bit (up to 158F from 132F on the high end), and you can clearly see the radiator, header, and valve cover areas are now showing the most heat. I was just doing some googling, and this phenomena is called Heat Soak.
Another surprise pic. Drove back to the office, I don't think the revs were quite as high on the way back, but still 3k-4k range in lower gears. Both the restaurant and my office are only about a minute off the interstate, and I tried to keep the revs high to keep things hot. But this ended up being the coolest of the pics, with the high temp now only 112F. I'm guessing that the radiator fans kicked in a lot sooner than the earlier drive, and so were able to cool things down better?