Jon Wilder
Pre-takeoff checklist
In cruise flight with carburetor heat off, can someone tell me whether carburetor temp should be above or below outside air temperature?
Baloney. That carb is a tiny refrigerator. There's a pressure drop in it, and anytime you lower air's pressure you also lower its temperature. Then the injection of the fuel and consequent evaporation of it will reduce the temperature further. The sum of the two factors can easily lower the carb temp by as much as 70° or a bit more, and the heat inside the cowl cannot keep up with that. Nor can the heat from a Lycoming's sump. The extraction of heat from the carb body is too aggressive and too fast.It depends. Yes, the carburetor is cooled as it atomizes fuel. However, the carb does not live in the OAT environment; it is typically in the lower cowl, and the air there is heated by the exhaust and cooling fins. This air temperature is greater than OAT; hence we don't place our OAT probe in the engine bay. This additional heat may be high enough that carb temp is greater than OAT temp even the carb is being actively cooled.