I looked at some steam tables last night, and found it's not easy to
find the volume of steam that comes from a volume of water.

Below is part of a table from K.N. Harris's book, Model Boilers and
Boilermaking.  Pressure is pressure above atmosphere, ie. PSIG.  The
volume is the volume of steam from one volume of water in whatever units
you're using: CC, cubic inches, cubic feet.  This is the information you
need to determine a water pump size. 

Pressure  Volume
 10       1036
 15        838
 20        726
 25        640
 30        572
 35        518
 40        474
 45        437
 50        405
 55        378
 60        354
 65        333
 70        318
 75        298
 80        283
 85        270
 90        257
 95        247
100        237
110        219
120        203
130        190
140        179
150        169
160        159
170        152
180        145
190        138
200        132



--
Bill Kaiser
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

There are three ways to do a job: good, cheap, and quick.
You can have any two.
A good, cheap job won't be quick.
A good, quick job won't be cheap.
A cheap, quick job won't be good.
 

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