93 lines
6.0 KiB
Plaintext
93 lines
6.0 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3883
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Title: HPR3883: Emergency Show: How to demonstrate the power of condensing steam
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3883/hpr3883.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 07:14:40
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3883 for Wednesday, the 21st of June 2023.
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Today's show is entitled Emergency Show How to Demonstrate the Power of Condensing
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Steam.
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It is hosted by Mike Ray and is about 8 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is a kitchen experiment to demonstrate the power of condensing steam.
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Hello and welcome to Hacker Public Radio.
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My name is Mike Ray.
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Uh oh, you're hearing that sound because this is an emergency show.
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Each PR is running low on scheduled podcasts.
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If you would like to submit a show, email admin at hackerpublicradio.org for more information.
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Today we're going to do a kitchen experiment which very impressively demonstrates the
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awesome power of condensing steam to create a partial vacuum.
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What are we going to need?
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The first thing you need is an empty drinks can, like a 330 millilitre coke soda can.
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Perhaps a bigger 400 millilitre can might work, but I've only ever tried it with a
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330 millilitre can.
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Wash it out thoroughly so there's no sugary residue in it.
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We're also going to need a source of heat and the best thing is the kitchen cooker top.
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And we're going to need a wide shallow container like a baking tray or something similar, something
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which can contain a small amount of cold water, which presents a large target.
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And we're going to need a pair of barbecue tongs or something, some kind of kitchen
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tongs that you can use to grab hold of the hot can when it's very hot without your hand
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being close enough to the heat to be in any danger of burning itself.
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So what do we do?
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After we've washed out the can, put about half an inch or a centimeter of water in the
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bottom of the can.
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Perhaps a centimeter and a half, something that will cover the sort of concave end of the
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can.
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And not too much.
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And put a similar depth of cold water, it doesn't have to be very cold, just as cold as
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it comes out of the cold water tap in the baking tray and stand the baking tray on the
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kitchen worktop next to the cooker.
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Now place the can on the heat or on the burner, turn on the burner or turn up the electricity
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whatever.
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And the can will very quickly start to come to the boil.
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The water is only a very small amount of water in the bottom of it, so it will boil quite
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quickly.
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And you can observe the steam begin to appear through the hole in the top of the can.
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Leave it to steam for several seconds to make sure that the can is nice and full of steam.
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And without actually removing or jogging can from the heat, grab a hold of it with the
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tongs.
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Now you need to do this with a sort of underhand grip so that you can very quickly and
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in one swift and smooth motion, pick up the can, flip it through 180 degrees onto its head
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and splash it down in the shallow water in the baking tray.
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Now when you do this, do it as quickly and as smoothly as you can possibly do it.
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So pick the can up, rotate your wrist so that the can is now upside down and slam it
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down in the cold water and you need to slam it down but as quickly as possible place
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it top down in the cold water.
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What happens is the steam inside the can will instantly condense producing a partial
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vacuum inside the can and the can will bam, be crushed by the atmospheric pressure outside
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the can because there's a partial vacuum inside it.
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And that is really all there is to it and that's a brilliant demonstration for onlookers,
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for kids to demonstrate the awesome power of condensing steam.
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Have a look at the show notes because they contain a few sentences about how the condensation
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of steam is used in a steam engine.
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Most people think of a steam engine, they think of steam being injected into a cylinder
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to push a piston out of the cylinder or along the cylinder connected to piston rods and
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cranks and things to convert the linear motion into rotary motion but that's only really
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half the story.
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Most of the efficiency comes from using an injection of cold water into a cylinder containing
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pressurized superheated steam to instantly condense the steam and produce a partial vacuum
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which will effectively suck the piston back along the cylinder and produce as much usable
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energy on the return stroke as in fact more stronger energy on the return stroke than
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was produced by injecting superheated steam into the cylinder to push the piston up and
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out of the cylinder and the same effect condensing steam to produce a partial vacuum is used
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to draw hot gases from the furnace, from the coal fire at the back end of the steam engine
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through pipes that run through the boiler, the superheated the pressurized boiler into
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the smokebox at the front of the steam engine to heat and those gases passing through the
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pipes helps to heat the water and the same partial vacuum created at the smokebox end
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as well as drawing the products of combustion through the boiler produce a draft of very
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stronger aft of fresh air into the furnace at the driving end which you can actually hear
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if you listen to a big powerful steam engine trying to pull a heavy train from a standing
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start to motion there will be very deep-throated chugs or chuffs or puffs of noise and gases
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shooting out the chimney rhythmically in synchronization with the effect of injecting cold
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water into the steam at the end of the locom to produce the partial vacuum which draws
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the gases and draws the draft across the furnace and the sound that you hear the impressive
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sound that you hear is the explosive power of the partial vacuum producing that draft
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and drawing those gases through the boiler.
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You have been listening to Hecker Public Radio at Hecker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording
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broadcast and click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an onsthost.com, the Internet Archive
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and our Sync.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International
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