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Re: Wind Chill on machinery


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Posted by JMOR on December 10, 2009 at 20:35:50 from (72.181.166.239):

In Reply to: Wind Chill on machinery posted by dave2 on December 09, 2009 at 21:11:38:


usetob said: (quoted from post at 22:52:31 12/10/09) Does Wind Chill Affect Machines?

Article #529

by Larry Gedney



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This article is provided as a public service by the Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska Fairbanks, in cooperation with the UAF research community. Larry Gedney is a seismologist at the Institute.



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It is well known that the wind-chill factor can lower the effective temperature experienced by human beings by many degrees, depending on the velocity of the wind. The debatable question often arises, "Does it also affect machines?"

Many of us have had the experience of sitting in a car at a stoplight with clear windows, only to have them fog up again when the car starts moving. More often than not, this is a result of snow that was on the hood being sucked through the car's heater system; but there is another factor involved as well, and that is wind chill.

If we were to take an engine block and install it on mounts in the middle of a field for the winter, it would make no difference in the temperature of that engine block if the wind blew or not. It would remain at the ambient temperature of the air surrounding it, whether or not the air was moving. However, if we were to start up that engine and let it warm up, there would be a great deal of difference in the block temperature depending on whether or not the wind was blowing.

Any object that creates its own internal heat will find that heat is removed from it faster if the air around it is moving. It is simply a matter of heat transfer--the "conveyor belt" of moving air (convection) will snatch the heat away much faster than if it were still.

So the answer to the question is yes. Wind chill does affect machines, but only if they are at a temperature above that of the surrounding air.


You were doing really, really, really good until you said "wind chill", then it went in the crapper. Sorry. I wish you had just said "wind" or "wind velocity". Once you interject the "chill" word, you transitioned into the human perception of cold.... an immeasurable perception of the human mind, which there has been an attempt only to quantify by sampling the feelings of a group (sample) of humans. Yes, there is a formula, but it as not derived scientifically, but by testing the 'feelings' of a number of sample subjects.


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