I'm sorry I'm not following you.
IMO it should be no different then pre-searing at 350 or higher degrees a steak or chop before you SV it. The external temp of the piece of meat will be very high however the internal temp will barely raise.
Yes, the IT will barely rise when you momentarily sear a steak or chop, but I don't see how that relates to cary-over IT rise when there's a temperature gradient of 160°. The gradient looks like this–
Center Exterior
90°...........130°...........170°...........210°...........250°
So, the roast is trying to reach thermal equilibrium by conducting heat toward the cooler center at the same time the hottest portion is being cooled by refrigeration. As that happens, some of the internal heat will conduct toward the exterior when the exterior becomes cooler than internal portions.
It's an interesting visualization and a rather complex thermal dynamics/thermal conduction problem. The rate at which a hunk of meat changes temperature is a function of a thermodynamics measurement called
Specific Heat. If we wanted to, we could pick a location along the gradient and graph the temperature change over time as the center temperature rose and the exterior temperature cooled. That's kinda' what Bentley was asking about.