Tom.G said:
Is there a fallacy in that approach?
No fallacy, maybe at cross-purposes. While measuring the time constant will be interesting, it will depend on the convection environment. For example, the acclimation could be accelerated by using fans to direct the temperature stable contact air onto the rotor. To speed the production process we need to reduce the asymptotic time constant you are measuring, which should make your measurement redundant.
The accelerated acclimation process I am considering would employ a stretchy insulated sock, with inbuilt sensors, that could be applied to any rotor in the class. The production process would be;
1. Weigh the rotor. Identify rotor material and look up the thermal capacity per kg of rotor material.
2. Put rotor in the sock, remove slack folds to exclude air with a zipper or spiral cord.
3. Measure initial temperature on all sensor channels.
4. Compute temperature change needed, then the energy required to reach 20°.
5. Prepare the volume and temperature of water needed for injection into the sock.
6. Inject the water. Sensors will show temperature passes thru the target temp as water spreads.
7. Watch as temperature fall back into the target temperature window.
8. Drain the (now close to 20°) water from the sock, remove the sock.
9. Verify the surface temperature with IR thermometer. Make the dimensional measurements.
That process makes it possible to cut acclimation time since a known thermal energy transfer will be from the water contact, all inside the insulated sock, which will also minimise disturbance of the measurement room temperature.