All steam is invisible. What you see in air is water condensing as some of the
steam is cooled. Superheated steam is steam above the boiling point, which is
what you'd get if you added heat to it like in an overheated engine.
Ron
--- On Fri, 4/9/10, WeslakeMonza1330@aol.com <WeslakeMonza1330@aol.com>
wrote:
From: WeslakeMonza1330@aol.com <WeslakeMonza1330@aol.com>
Subject: Re: [Spridgets] Heater Box Clips
To: soavero@yahoo.com, davriker@nwi.net, spridgets@autox.team.net,
billyzoom@billyzoom.com
Date: Friday, April 9, 2010, 6:29 PM
I thought there was something called super heated steam which is
practically invisible to the naked eye?
In a message dated 09/04/2010
20:16:48 GMT Daylight Time, soavero@yahoo.com
writes:
Correct.
There's no
phase change (latent heat) available after steam,
either.
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