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The effect of sunlight on a temperature probe is negligible once the plane is
flying, as long as the probe is exposed to the air stream and not behind a
window. The convective heat transfer rates from the air stream are hugely
greater than solar radiation input, even if the probe is painted flat black.
On the ground, however, it is a different story, as we all know. So put the
sensor in the shade if you want to know OAT before engine start. If it is in
the sunlight, keep it in the propeller slip stream if you want a good reading
while taxiing out to the runway, recognizing it may take a few minutes for a
hot sensor to cool to ambient temperature in the propeller breeze.
Fred
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LML website: http://www.olsusa.com/Users/Mkaye/maillist.html
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