Jed, you are not answering my questions.
The valve is not so much open, so the quantity of water is simply
arbitrary. You cannot say 'if there was much liquid water then it will go
out from the pipe'.
What is interesting is:
1) Why the colonel as not installed a demister?
2) Why the colonel even a water trap??
They simply made a hole inside the tube. Withouyt a water trap (or
something similiar like a demister) you cannot be sure that the water is
going out from the drain tube.
I think that a simply water trap, with only a condensed water of
1liter/hour wouldn't be a problem. Yep, it's a problem when there are
hundred of liquid water mixed with vapour. Mmmh.


2011/11/3 Jed Rothwell <[email protected]>

> Mattia Rizzi wrote:
>
>  Jed Rothwell:> it. If there had been a lot of water coming out with
>> steam, that bucket would have overflowed in no time.
>>
>> Mattia Rizzi: Incorrect since the valve is pratically closed. SImply you
>> don't know.
>>
>
> Lewan felt the lower pipe and the valve attached to it and reported it was
> hot.
>
> He also pointed to the drain below the pipe and said it is used to drain
> water from the pipe. "You have water in liquid phase being picked up here.
> Underneath, going here [the plastic container]." Levi was standing there
> when he said these things. If that valve was closed, he would have
> corrected Lewan.
>
> See:
>
> http://www.nyteknik.se/**nyheter/energi_miljo/energi/**article3303682.ece<http://www.nyteknik.se/nyheter/energi_miljo/energi/article3303682.ece>
>
> - Jed
>
>

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