An IR thermometer won't be accurate enough to make this measurement. The temperature difference will be very small, and since the cable jacket has different emissivity than whatever the surroundings are, the error due to emissivity difference will make the actual temperature difference indistinguishable.
I put 25A through #14 copper once and it went about 2F above ambient as measured with a precision thermistor placed under the jacket. I haven't checked this value against the Neher-Mcgrath equation.
I'm trying to make sense of passing 30A through #12 in an HVAC setup without unduly shortening the life of the Romex insulation. Every 9C increase halves the life and 30A instead of 20A is a (30/20)^2 = 2.3x increase in insulation temp rise above ambient from whatever the 20A temp is.
For those philosophers on this forum - with the time on my hands I am trying to make sense of every decision I have ever made in my whole life, and it's not so easy! :laughing:
Life is lived forward and understood backward.
For those philosophers on this forum - with the time on my hands I am trying to make sense of every decision I have ever made in my whole life, and it's not so easy! :laughing:
Life is lived forward and understood backward.
Some of my decisions made sense at the time. :whistling2: In hindsight, maybe not so much.
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