olefud wrote:marcush. wrote:you are assuming there is just radiated heat involved ,which is definitively not the case.the case of gold foil is only good for this special case...and even for this in space they use MLI (Multilayerinsulation see wiki link above) ,I don´t say gold is bad or useless but i say the thin layer of gold atoms on a mylar foil is not really the ideal candidate close to a red-hot glowing exhaust pipe inside a sidepod.
But the only purpose of the reflecting foil is to protect against radiant heating that is the major heat transfer mechanism for brakes, exhaust etc operating at high temperature. A small air gap with cooling convection flow protects the foil from sensible heat. With high temps, the substrate is probably a polyimide rather than Mylar (PET).
A single layer would be better than multi layer foil since it would radiate/absorb to ambient rather than with a heated second layer. I suspect that both aluminum and gold foils are produced in a vacuum by vapor deposition. Aluminum would need to then be overcoated with a second protective layer to protect against oxidation. The gold can go naked and is thus less likely to absorb IR.
The gold foil needs to actually "see" the radiated heat to be able to work at all. To think the air in the area around the headers will not get -very-hot is a wish not coming true ,especially right at the start when the car is not moving for long long seconds.
To think multilayer is inferior .go back and investigate it works very ,very well -ask Boltzmann -sorry i think he has passed away long time ago...
in a real world test the gold foil was under same conditions surpassed by aluminium multilayer insulation by a factor of 2 when it came to reaching the target critical temp behind the insulation.
I have not actually tested against simple aluminium tape like the one you take to seal welding area when working with purging gas ,but my feeling is the effect is fairly similar..
you are right the gold is deposited on a polymide film which is on a thin layer of glass fabric which is sticked to the panel by means of a silicone glue.