msucog -
The variation caused by hot cement is probably less than the problems you seem to encounter on your posts regarding curing and handling of cylinders. Fortunately, the long term concrete curing process provides a "cushion", but not an absolute "cure".
There are clearly defined standards for cylinder preparation, curing and handling. Variation from these standards render the results questionable. Unfortunately, hot cement coincides with hot weather and the problems maintaining proper conditions for the cylinders independent of the site conditions. Comfining cylinders in a hot box is the same as using hot cement and the results cannot be documented in the real world. All sampling and testing guidelines must be established before the actual start of construction and must be rigorously enforced early to establish a solid baseline.
Hot cement is a minor "blip" in the process that presents some unusual problems for an engineer to fully understand. When I was in college during the dark ages, our concrete lab instructor turned his back on the pranks involving mix constituants (sugar, flyash, accellerators), sample preparation (rebar, missing rodding), sample handling (impact) and testing procedures (unlevel capping, off-center testing machine alignment) that were always present. - In the end, the class had to come up with an anaylysis of the causes that turned out to be more beneficial than the "pure" testing procedure that should happen in a lab or controlled site.
As I mentioned in my previous post, you need a reliable historical base to operate off of before you try to trouble-shoot.
Dick