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![]() "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote in message ... "Eisboch" wrote in message . .. "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote in message ... What about when it hits the windshield, under those same conditions? Wind will cause an object to lose heat faster ... but will not cool it below the ambient temperature. The evaporation of a liquid is a state change whereby energy is used and heat is given off. Wind chill is a measurement of rapid cooling of living tissue. Eisboch We're going in circles. Stop focusing on the words "wind chill". Focus on this: Assume you're a chemist, and you know for a fact that you personally have correctly created windshield washer fluid that doesn't freeze at (to pick a number) zero F., why does that fluid actually freeze at a higher temperature, say 5 F., when the vehicle is moving and the fluid hits the windshield? Since this phenomenon actually occurs, please base your next response on that reality. Possible responses: - "I don't know". - "Here's why:...." - "I'm posting a non-answer because I have nothing better to do". should not freeze at the 5F. But there will be some cooling via evaporation but that is not "wind chill". |
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