Sounds like ya got it figured, but…
When following temperature on electrical- few things to remember:
The $50 & under temp guns aren’t super accurate on aim- it’s reading in a cone shape away from the lens. Closer is better but only to a certain distance- and the distance is different from one manufacturer to the next- so take time to read the specs and sharpie on the gun the optimal close distance.
Wherever the heat is highest- that is the point of most resistance (aka usually the problem).
Emissivity is a LIAR. This means shiny objects like copper, unpainted steel especially stainless or chrome and glass -gives completely wacked out readings.
Put a bit of black electrical tape on the surface to get accurate readings. The tape will take a minute to heat up but it will be closer than the reflective materials are. Flat black paint is excellent.
There are thermal imaging guns for $100-150 range that are nkt fit for professional use but are amazing for a mechanic or diy handyman stuff. FAR better than the little $50 laser point gun that only tells a number. With these you scan an area, wire harness, etc in 1/10 the time. And the more you play with it the better you get. - WARNING! NEVER in the sun. You can use it outside but point it at the sun for even a second and it is a worthless paperweight.
They come in very handy for things like finding studs in walls, finding where you are missing insulation, finding pipes behind walls, and even super early breast or similar cancer detection but isn’t used because it has a really high rate of false positives- but is the thing to tell you way earlier to pay attention over time.
If folks are interested, there are some instructional training books i can send pics of the more critical how to stuff privately - but I’M not allowed to share it publicly. But iirc there may be someone here who has a similar book they got at a yard sale or something and they could share it.
For my yob I have to be a level 1 Thermographer. Which basically means paying a grand or so for a week long class without falling asleep to learn how to use the wazoo level thermal cameras and stop things from going wrong before they would normally. At first I thought “could help in a few obscure situations.”
Several years into it I am thinking “I wish I had a $35,000 camera.” Haha.
In that video the hf96 comes out really well for $166. The downside it showed was the emissivity problem on the metal rim- but that is a normal problem for more accurate tools. Like I mentioned, sticking on a piece of black electrical tape (3m super 88 preferred) will eliminate that issue. Then remove it when done and go to the next task.