I found an solution to my problem in the book IRstuff posted (Example 2.8), however it involves an h-bar. At the beginning of the book is a calculation:
h-bar = q/delta-T
where:
q = power/area
Can I use:
input power/area of element
in the calculation of h-bar? So say I have 4000 W going into an element of 4.7124E-3 m^2, so q = 8.4882E5 W/m^2, and delta-T = some theoretical maximum (say 1850-dec C) - some theoretical starting value (say 20-dec C), so delta-T = 1830-deg, giving an h-bar of 463.8361. I then calculate T = 1404.6K (using the calculations in Example 2.8), which I plug back into my delta-T and iterate to get a final T = 1271.4K = 998.4-deg C.
Does this make sense? Am I doing this correctly? The example iterates a temperature in calculating h-rad (again, I use the same theoretical maximum of 1850-deg C and a minimum of 20-deg C to do this and iterate with the 1404.6K), so that's how I came up with the idea to use theoretical values for the h-bar calculation and iterate. Thanks for the help with this.