My apologies in advance for wandering so far afield on this one....
Thought I might draw on the vast and varied knowledge of the list -- I am
working on a project that involves being able to prove that the
temperature inside a closed vehicle during the summer is substantially
higher than outside. Given the number of warnings we hear each summer
about not leaving kids or animals inside a locked vehicle, you'd think
that there would be a quantifiable source for this, but there doesn't
appear to be.
I understand that this is called passive solar heating, and is similar to
the greenhouse effect. I also understand that there are a number of
different factors that come into play. What I am looking for is a
formula or published table from a reputable source that says that if it
is X degrees outside a car, on the average it will be Y degrees inside
the car. If a formula is used, I need to be able to authenticate it.
The only facts I have is that the outside temperature reached a high of
85 degrees F, the humidity was was 80%, and the car was gold with a tan
interior. It sat in one spot, unshaded, from 3:30 am (outside temp 70
F), through 3:00 pm (85 F) ( the outside temp reached 80 F by noon that
day).
I already checked with assorted animal rights groups (made sense at the
time).
Any suggestions?
Rich Arnold
Council Bluffs, Iowa
'74.5 RB MGB "Maggie"
'78 Chevy Half-Ton "Waltzin' Matilda"
'79 Midget "Miss Molly"
richard.arnold@juno.com or rdarnold@neonramp.com
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