mustangs
Mechanical
- Jul 23, 2002
- 19
Hi all,
I have a machine that is generating steam at atmospheric pressure. The steam passes along about 10 feet of piping and then through a series of condensers.
After leaving the condensers, the steam continues to flow out of the system and eventually into the atmosphere. The steam at this point is around 1-5 psig and can range anywhere from 80-140 deg F and the physical properties are the same as clean water.
I need to know how to adjust my calcs so that I can lengthen the pipe coming out of the system and have no steam coming out. This will likely produce a lot of water that will simply be fed into an adjacent tank.
Any ideas on how to accurately deal with the change of state and figure out how much piping needs to be put in would be a huge help.
thanks
Mustangs
I have a machine that is generating steam at atmospheric pressure. The steam passes along about 10 feet of piping and then through a series of condensers.
After leaving the condensers, the steam continues to flow out of the system and eventually into the atmosphere. The steam at this point is around 1-5 psig and can range anywhere from 80-140 deg F and the physical properties are the same as clean water.
I need to know how to adjust my calcs so that I can lengthen the pipe coming out of the system and have no steam coming out. This will likely produce a lot of water that will simply be fed into an adjacent tank.
Any ideas on how to accurately deal with the change of state and figure out how much piping needs to be put in would be a huge help.
thanks
Mustangs