I would agree with that, and there is fair amount of shaded surfaces to keep the ambient temp a few degrees cooler even as hte A/C draws in air from non-shaded areas.
But what about the heating of the metal case and coils themselves? Doesn't that affectively make the coil surface warmer, creating the same effect as having a high ambient air temp???
I think it would reduce heat transfer sgnificantly for 1-2 minutes as it cools off towards ambient temp at start-up, but the constant sun heating the unit would then continue durign the entire run time.
I look at this matter from the perspective of knowing the three forms of heat transfer: convection, conduction, radiation.
Air flowing over the condenser coils and out of the unit via the condenser fan =
convection (forced)
Heat rejection from condenser coil into air flowing over coil =
conduction (the coil conducts heat from the condensing liquid into the air stream over the coil - the air is the heat sink)
Surfaces of condensing unit and nearby surfaces, such as the ground, siding of the house, nearby paving, etc. =
radiation
Regarding radation, bear in mind that radiant heat does not transfer heat until it strikes a solid object. Therefore if a brick wall behind the condensing unit, for example, is 120 degrees and the condenser coil is cooler, radiant heat will have an effect on the coil surface.
To what extent would require measurement/data logging, but the thermodynamics are present regardless.
Take an infrared thermometer with you sometime and visit a condensing unit sitting out in the sun running on a hot day. Measure the coil surface temperature in several spots, and measure nearby surfaces in several spots. How hot bare soil can get on a sunny day is an eye opener. Brick walls, paving, etc. also similar. Next compare these sunny areas to sunny areas of ground cover/lawn/shrubbery. A bit cooler, yes? Plants also add the component of evaporative cooling to the mix, since plants are undergoing transpiration/photosynthesis while in the light.