L
Larry Schuldt
Guest
On Fri, 20 Jun 2003 22:24:13 GMT, Tom Parker <[email protected]> wrote:
>According to the Sears web site it's 240 deg F (not 140).
>
>Also, several folks have warned about the dangers of high pressure, but my understanding is that
>this unit shoots out a more gentle steam mist, rather than a high pressure blast.
>
>-- Tom
>
240 degrees and "gentle steam mist" are mutually exclusive. Water boils at 212. In order to get
hotter than that, it MUST be under more pressre than would be implied by a gentle steam mist. Ya
can't have it both ways.
larry
--
To reply by e-mail, be polite. Rudeness will get you nowhere.
>According to the Sears web site it's 240 deg F (not 140).
>
>Also, several folks have warned about the dangers of high pressure, but my understanding is that
>this unit shoots out a more gentle steam mist, rather than a high pressure blast.
>
>-- Tom
>
240 degrees and "gentle steam mist" are mutually exclusive. Water boils at 212. In order to get
hotter than that, it MUST be under more pressre than would be implied by a gentle steam mist. Ya
can't have it both ways.
larry
--
To reply by e-mail, be polite. Rudeness will get you nowhere.