I was surfing around Rayteks site this morning and stumbled on a chart listing different emissivity values of metals.
Now putting 2 and 2 together, I figured that when we measure down the glow plug hole of our engines (in my case the TRX 2.5), we are aiming at an area that includes (at least a little) aluminum.
Checking the emissivity value of aluminum (in the range that Raytek suggests for their mini-temp guns), its a whopping .1. Whereas the temp guns are set and calibrated at .95.
So, is there a hole in my theory that says measuring this way is not correct? Granted, if we aim directly at the glow plug (which is probably steel, right?) the emissivity is correct. But on the other hand, would aiming directly at the glow plug give a false high measurement, because after all the purpose of the glow plug is to STORE heat?
I'm confused.........I was going to return my Radio Shack temp gun and get another one (cheaper, off Ebay), but if its not going to be really accurate, whats the point?
All of this came about because for some reason my temp gauge reads REALLY high but my truck shows zero signs of overheating.
For reference, the emissivity chart is located here
Thanks!!
-Chris
Now putting 2 and 2 together, I figured that when we measure down the glow plug hole of our engines (in my case the TRX 2.5), we are aiming at an area that includes (at least a little) aluminum.
Checking the emissivity value of aluminum (in the range that Raytek suggests for their mini-temp guns), its a whopping .1. Whereas the temp guns are set and calibrated at .95.
So, is there a hole in my theory that says measuring this way is not correct? Granted, if we aim directly at the glow plug (which is probably steel, right?) the emissivity is correct. But on the other hand, would aiming directly at the glow plug give a false high measurement, because after all the purpose of the glow plug is to STORE heat?
I'm confused.........I was going to return my Radio Shack temp gun and get another one (cheaper, off Ebay), but if its not going to be really accurate, whats the point?
All of this came about because for some reason my temp gauge reads REALLY high but my truck shows zero signs of overheating.
For reference, the emissivity chart is located here
Thanks!!
-Chris