> You can't have it both ways.  Either the steam is dry (complete
> vaporization), in which case the temperature and pressure of the effluent
> are independent, or it's not.  Your assertion that the output temperature
> depends directly on the pressure is a tacit statement that it's not
> producing dry steam.
>

Thank you for that crystal clear explanation!   If Rossi wanted to
eliminate this potential source of serious error, he could have done so by
simply running a blank determination (a whole system calibration run) in
which all of the heat was provided by the (properly metered) electrical
heater. That would show if the heat put in was being properly metered or
"over" measured.   Or he could have increased coolant flow to keep the
water liquid (like Levi supposedly did).  Either way, the issue of dryness
of steam would be eliminated.

Could it be that this error source is a key part of Rossi's power
generation measurement in the tests in which it was used?   Of course it
could.  I don't think it has been definitively ruled out.

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