My house is cold - must be the time of year ...
2 years ago I got a condensing boiler, but it was still not warm enough so last year I had some rads replaced with bigger ones. My old ones were cast aluminium with flat front panels, but the plumber said he could not get ones like it, so I have pressed steel rads with a flat front panel.
What he did not say was the the flat panel is just welded on to a normal rad, and there is an air gap behind it. I soon found that the front temperature was lower than the back, but he told me it did not matter as the heating was by convection rather than radiation [I'd have thought the hotter the surface, the more convection, but never mind].
Any way I want to measure the temperature and I wonder if the is a good way to do it. The best I can do in hold a jam-making [!] thermometer with a brass housing against it. This is easier on the flat front than the back: the temperatures back and front are obviously too low as the contact is poor, but even so there is a big percentage difference. Two sets of readings show back/front respectively as 36°/28° and 42°/32°: clearly if this ratio was maintained when the hotter of the two is increased to whatever temperature the rad is really achieving [?70°C] the difference represents a huge amount of lost heat.
If this is the case, why are double-skinned rads like this made, and how can I get accurate measurements?
Cheers, Colin