On Wed, Jun 22, 2011 at 1:25 PM, Mark Iverson <[email protected]> wrote:
> > THE INSTRUMENT DOES PROVIDE MASS OF WATER AS VAPOR, AND SUBTRACTING THAT > FROM THE MASS OF WATER > GOING IN WILL GIVE YOU THE MASS OF LIQUID WATER THAT IS COMING > OUT!!!!!!!!!! > > No. It determines the mass of water vapor per unit volume of air. Even if it gave the mass of water vapor per unit volume of steam, you'd need to know the volume to get the mass. For that you'd need a flowmeter. But if you had a flowmeter to measure the flow rate of the steam, you wouldn't need the RH meter.

