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Wind chill and antifreeze

NutmegCT

Great Pumpkin
Bronze
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If your antifreeze protects you to -20F, but the car is outside and the windchill is -40 ... are you in trouble?

Or is it ok, because the engine doesn't actually get hit by the wind?

:crazyeyes:


Tom
 
I suppose you could always put a thermometer next to the engine, leave it there for a few hours and then check it.

But I'd say you're probably OK too.

And I'd especially trust John on cold weather advice....he's the expert!
 
Or is it ok, because the engine doesn't actually get hit by the wind?

Temperature is nothing but a measure of energy density. Once everything has reached equilibrium the velocity of the cooling medium is irrelevant. Higher velocity of the cooling medium will cause equilibrium to be reached sooner.

Much like the Honey Badger the antifreeze "don't care" about the wind.
 
Nial said:
And I'd especially trust John on cold weather advice....he's the expert!


:lol: TRUTH.
 
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