I take it whoever told you that has never watched fermentation through a glass vessel. With the amount of activity turning over the wort; I cannot see that possible. But I have never actually measured it.
QldKev
Theoretically the temperature difference reflects the SPEED of the heat movement.
So if you are using your fridge to get a warm wort down to a cooler temp then by definition
the wort must be warmer in the middle than the outside. If the outside temp is constant day after day
than again the internal temp MUST be the same as the outside, otherwise the outside temp would change
to balance it. Think of a playground see-saw, you only have to measure where one end of the see-saw is,
and measure the slope, to know where the other end is. The heat must always be flowing from hot to cold,
just like water running down a slope. A temp strip on the inside wall of your fridge will help immensely.
If fridge inside wall temp equals fermenter outside temp then you very probably have no temp variation inside fermenter.
I used this concept effectively in the metal industry to 'measure' the internal temp of big metal blocks,
by measuring the outside over time and measuring heat flow through the surface. Sound complex but is
quite easy in practice.
Big temp variations can occur on brew day. I once was pouring kgs of ice into a warm brew and it wasn't cooling
much on the temp strip, so popped in a thermometer and found 5 deg difference, had a cold centre and warm around
the outside due to lack of stirring and impatience.
But after a few hours the temp differences will resolve themselves through natural convection and conduction even without
any fermentation turbulence. Hot and cold will find and balance each other just as relentlessly as yeast will consume sugar.